Distribution of solids in the rings of the HD 163296 disk: a multiwavelength study
G. Guidi, A. Isella, L. Testi, C. J. Chandler, H. B. Liu, H. M., Schmid, G. Rosotti, C. Meng, J. Jennings, J. P. Williams, J. M. Carpenter, I., de Gregorio-Monsalvo, H. Li, S.F. Liu, S. Ortolani, S. P. Quanz, L. Ricci and, M. Tazzari

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution ALMA and VLA observations to analyze dust distribution and grain properties in the HD 163296 disk, revealing complexities in optical depth effects and dust composition that influence interpretations of disk structure.
Contribution
It provides a detailed multiwavelength analysis of dust properties in HD 163296, highlighting the impact of optical depth, grain porosity, and composition assumptions on derived disk parameters.
Findings
Optical depth > 1 at wavelengths ≤ 1.3 mm affects spectral index interpretation.
Outer disk contains small grains (~200 μm), inner region may have larger grains.
Grain porosity significantly influences dust mass estimates and opacity models.
Abstract
In this paper we analyze new observations from ALMA and VLA, at a high angular resolution corresponding to 5 - 8 au, of the protoplanetary disk around HD 163296 to determine the dust spatial distribution and grain properties. We fit the spectral energy distribution as a function of the radius at five wavelengths from 0.9 to 9\,mm, using a simple power law and a physical model based on an analytic description of radiative transfer that includes isothermal scattering. We considered eight dust populations and compared the models' performance using Bayesian evidence. Our analysis shows that the moderately high optical depth (>1) at 1.3 mm in the dust rings artificially lower the millimeter spectral index, which should therefore not be considered as a reliable direct proxy of the dust properties and especially the grain size. We find that the outer disk is composed of…
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