The ALMA survey to Resolve exoKuiper belt Substructures (ARKS). X. Interpreting the peculiar dust rings around HD 131835
M. R. Jankovic, N. Pawellek, J. Zander, T. L\"ohne, A. V. Krivov, J. Olofsson, A. Brennan, J. Milli, M. Bonduelle, M. C. Wyatt, A. A. Sefilian, T. Pearce, S. Mac Manamon, Y. Han, S. Marino, L. Matr\'a, A. Mo\'or, M. Booth, E. Chiang, E. Mansell, P. Weber, A. M. Hughes

TL;DR
This study investigates the peculiar dust rings around HD 131835, exploring whether they are two distinct planetesimal belts or shaped by dust-gas interactions, using ALMA observations and modeling.
Contribution
It compares collisional and dust-gas interaction models to explain the dust ring structures around HD 131835, highlighting the limitations of each approach.
Findings
Collisional models struggle to match observations without extreme material differences.
Gas-driven models can reproduce ring locations and brightness ratios but underestimate overall brightness.
Two planetesimal belts are plausible, but their differing properties require further explanation.
Abstract
Dusty discs detected around main-sequence stars are thought to be signs of planetesimal belts in which the dust distribution is shaped by collisional and dynamical processes, including interactions with gas if present. The debris disc around the young A-type star HD 131835 is composed of two dust rings at ~65 au and ~100 au, a third unconstrained innermost component, and a gaseous component centred at ~65 au. New ALMA observations show that the inner of the two dust rings is brighter than the outer one, in contrast with previous observations in scattered light. We explore two scenarios that could explain these observations: the two dust rings might represent distinct planetesimal belts with different collisional properties, or only the inner ring might contain planetesimals while the outer ring consists entirely of dust that has migrated outwards due to gas drag. To explore the first…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
