An extended scattered light disk around AT Pyx -- Possible planet formation in a cometary globule
C. Ginski, R. Gratton, A. Bohn, C. Dominik, S. Jorquera, G. Chauvin,, J. Milli, M. Rodriguez, M. Benisty, R. Launhardt, A. Mueller, G. Cugno, R.G., van Holstein, A. Boccaletti, G. A. Muro-Arena, S. Desidera, M. Keppler, A., Zurlo, E. Sissa, T. Henning, M. Janson, M. Langlois

TL;DR
This study presents the first spatially resolved disk around AT Pyx in a cometary globule, revealing structures suggestive of embedded gas giant planet formation despite harsh UV radiation conditions.
Contribution
It provides detailed imaging of a protoplanetary disk in a challenging environment, indicating potential planet formation signatures in a cometary globule.
Findings
Extended (>126 au) disk with complex sub-structure
Detection of spiral-like features possibly caused by a gas giant
Disk may be eccentric or self-shadowed, consistent with planet formation signs
Abstract
To understand how the multitude of planetary systems that have been discovered come to be, we need to study systems at different evolutionary stages, with different central stars but also in different environments. The most challenging environment for planet formation may be the harsh UV radiation field of nearby massive stars which quickly erodes disks by external photo-evaporation. We have observed the AT Pyx system, located in the head of a cometary globule in the Gum Nebula, to search for signs of ongoing planet formation. We used the extreme adaptive optics imager VLT/SPHERE to observe AT Pyx in polarized light as well as total intensity in the J, H and K-band. Additionally we employed VLT/NACO to observe the system in the L-band. We resolve the disk around AT Pyx in scattered light across multiple wavelengths. We find an extended (>126 au) disk, with an intermediate inclination…
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