Observing planet-driven dust spirals with ALMA
Jessica Speedie, Richard A. Booth, Ruobing Dong

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that ALMA can detect planet-driven dust spirals in protoplanetary disks, even for low-mass planets, using synthetic observations and simulations, highlighting ALMA's potential for planet detection.
Contribution
The paper provides a comprehensive analysis of ALMA's ability to detect planet-driven dust spirals, including the effects of disk conditions and observational parameters, which was previously not well characterized.
Findings
Thermal mass planets at tens of au produce detectable spirals within hours.
ALMA can detect spirals caused by planets as small as Neptune mass.
Spiral detection is feasible without resolving the spiral structure.
Abstract
ALMA continuum observations of thermal emission from the dust component of protoplanetary disks have revealed an abundance of substructures that may be interpreted as evidence for embedded planets, but planet-driven spiral arms -- perhaps one of the most compelling lines of evidence -- have proven comparatively elusive. In this work, we test the capabilities of ALMA to detect the planet-driven spiral signal in continuum emission. Carrying out hydrodynamic simulations and radiative transfer calculations, we present synthetic Band 7 continuum images for a wide range of disk and observing conditions. We show that thermal mass planets at tens of au typically drive spirals detectable within a few hours of integration time, and the detectable planet mass may be as low as Neptune mass (). The grains probed by ALMA form spirals morphologically identical to the…
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