The grazing angle icy protoplanetary disk PDS 453
Laurine Martinien, Fran\c{c}ois M\'enard, Gaspard Duch\^ene, Ryo, Tazaki, Marshall D. Perrin, Karl R. Stapelfeldt, Christophe Pinte, Schuyler, G. Wolff, Carol Grady, Carsten Dominik, Maxime Roumesy, Jie Ma, Christian, Ginski, Dean C. Hines, Glenn Schneider

TL;DR
This study uses high-inclination observations and radiative transfer modeling to analyze the structure and composition of the PDS 453 protoplanetary disk, revealing a water ice-rich, ring-like morphology with a density jump at 70 au.
Contribution
First detailed radiative transfer modeling of PDS 453's highly inclined disk incorporating water ice absorption features.
Findings
Disk shows a ring-like structure with a density jump at 70 au.
Water ice is present and contributes to the 3.1 μm absorption band.
Disk inclination is approximately 80 degrees.
Abstract
PDS 453 is a rare highly inclined disk where the stellar photosphere is seen at grazing incidence on the disk surface. Our goal is take advantage of this geometry to constrain the structure and composition of this disk, in particular the fact that it shows a 3.1 m water ice band in absorption that can be related uniquely to the disk. We observed the system in polarized intensity with the VLT/SPHERE instrument, as well as in polarized light and total intensity using the HST/NICMOS camera. Infrared archival photometry and a spectrum showing the water ice band are used to model the spectral energy distribution under Mie scattering theory. Based on these data, we fit a model using the radiative transfer code MCFOST to retrieve the geometry and dust and ice content of the disk. PDS 453 has the typical morphology of a highly inclined system with two reflection nebulae where the disk…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSpace Exploration and Technology · Astro and Planetary Science · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
