Probing dust properties through polarized scattered-light images of a sample of ring-shaped protoplanetary disks
Maxime Roumesy, Fran\c{c}ois M\'enard, Gaspard Duch\^ene, Ryo Tazaki, Christian Ginski

TL;DR
This study uses polarized scattered-light images of protoplanetary disks to analyze dust grain properties, identifying two main scattering phase function categories linked to dust composition and structure.
Contribution
Introduces a method combining polarized light imaging and scattering phase function analysis to characterize dust properties in protoplanetary disks.
Findings
Identified two categories of scattering phase functions: monotonically decreasing and bell-shaped.
Linked scattering phase function shapes to specific dust grain compositions and structures.
Provided statistical trends on dust populations in protoplanetary disks.
Abstract
The evolution of protoplanetary disks, especially in the early stages of planetary formation, as dust grows, is the cornerstone of the birth of planets. The mechanisms involved in the growth of sub-micrometric dust grains into planetesimals within a very short time frame are a challenging field of study, while the initial conditions remain relatively undefined. One of the main challenges is to unambiguously identify the dust properties within the disk, and our goal is to break this barrier by investigating the light scattered by dust particles lying on the protoplanetary disk surface from many recent promising observations. In this study, we used a set of 30 polarized light images composed of new VLT/SPHERE observations to examine the light scattered by dust grains. For each ring-shaped system, we used the new DRAGyS tool to estimate the disk geometry using the substructures visible on…
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