Signs of late infall and possible planet formation around DR Tau using VLT/SPHERE and LBTI/LMIRCam
D. Mesa, C. Ginski, R. Gratton, S. Ertel, K. Wagner, M. Bonavita, D., Fedele, M. Meyer, T. Henning, M. Langlois, A. Garufi, S. Antoniucci, R., Claudi, D. Defrere, S. Desidera, M. Janson, N. Pawellek, E. Rigliaco, V., Squicciarini, A. Zurlo, A. Boccaletti, M. Bonnefoy

TL;DR
This study used VLT/SPHERE and LBTI/LMIRCam to observe DR Tau, revealing new disk structures and a potential forming planet, providing insights into early planet formation processes around young stars.
Contribution
First direct imaging detection of multiple spiral arms and a candidate planet in the disk of DR Tau, highlighting signs of late infall and ongoing planet formation.
Findings
Detected two new spiral arms with different properties.
Identified a compact structure likely caused by a forming planet.
Suggested infall of material as a possible origin for the spiral features.
Abstract
Context. Protoplanetary disks around young stars often contain substructures like rings, gaps, and spirals that could be caused by interactions between the disk and forming planets. Aims. We aim to study the young (1-3 Myr) star DR Tau in the near-infrared and characterize its disk, which was previously resolved through sub-millimeter interferometry with ALMA, and to search for possible sub-stellar companions embedded into it. Methods. We observed DR Tau with VLT/SPHERE both in polarized light (H broad band) and total intensity (in Y, J, H, and K spectral bands). We also performed L' band observations with LBTI/LMIRCam on the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT). Results. We found two previously undetected spirals extending north-east and south of the star, respectively. We further detected an arc-like structure north of the star. Finally a bright, compact and elongated structure was…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
