Sub-millimeter images of a dusty Kuiper belt around eta Corvi
M. C. Wyatt, J. S. Greaves, W. R. F. Dent, I. M. Coulson

TL;DR
This paper presents high-resolution sub-millimeter and mid-infrared images of eta Corvi's circumstellar disk, revealing a complex, inclined ring structure with potential clumps, and discusses implications for planetary formation and disk evolution.
Contribution
First detailed sub-millimeter imaging of eta Corvi's dusty disk, revealing a inclined ring with possible clumpy structure and insights into planetary formation processes.
Findings
Resolved disk at 850um with ~100AU size
Detected two symmetric peaks offset from star at 100AU
Inner 100AU region appears cleared of dust
Abstract
We present sub-millimeter and mid-infrared images of the circumstellar disk around the nearby F2V star eta Corvi. The disk is resolved at 850um with a size of ~100AU. At 450um the emission is found to be extended at all position angles, with significant elongation along a position angle of 130+-10deg; at the highest resolution (9.3") this emission is resolved into two peaks which are to within the uncertainties offset symmetrically from the star at 100AU projected separation. Modeling the appearance of emission from a narrow ring in the sub-mm images shows the observed structure cannot be caused by an edge-on or face-on axisymmetric ring; the observations are consistent with a ring of radius 150+-20AU seen at 45+-25deg inclination. More face-on orientations are possible if the dust distribution includes two clumps similar to Vega; we show how such a clumpy structure could arise from the…
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