论文标题
围绕进化的恒星的过渡磁盘种群:行星的指纹?银河系后二进制文件的磁盘目录
A population of transition disks around evolved stars: Fingerprints of planets? Catalog of disks surrounding Galactic post-AGB binaries
论文作者
论文摘要
偶像后的巨型分支(后AGB)二进制室周围环绕着大量的气体和灰尘磁盘,类似于年轻恒星周围的原行星磁盘。我们通过磁盘组装了所有已知的银河后二进制文件的目录。我们探讨了不同可观察物之间的相关性,目的是更多地了解潜在的磁盘二进制相互作用。我们编制了85个银河后二进制系统的光谱能量分布。我们构建了一个颜色图,以区分红外过量的不同磁盘形态。我们对不同的磁盘类型进行了分类,并搜索了与这些系统的其他观察性特征的相关性。我们的目标中有8%至12%被过渡磁盘包围,即没有或低近红外过量的磁盘。我们发现这些过渡磁盘与在后AGB恒星表面上的难治元素的耗竭之间存在很强的联系。我们将此链接解释为一种刺激磁盘内灰尘和气体分离的机制的证据,并且还会产生过渡磁盘结构。我们建议这种机制可能是由于一个巨大的行星在磁盘上雕刻一个孔,从而有效地将灰尘捕获在外部磁盘部分中。我们提出了磁盘进化场景,具体取决于磁盘中如此巨大的行星的存在。我们主张,巨型行星可以成功解释过渡磁盘与观察到的难治材料的耗竭之间的联系。如果确认行星情景,则围绕后AGB二进制文件的磁盘可能是测试行星盘相互作用及其对二进制恒星晚期演变的影响的独特实验室。此类行星是第一代或第二代体的问题尚待考虑。我们认为这些磁盘非常适合在前所未有的参数空间中研究行星形成。
Post-asymptotic giant branch (post-AGB) binaries are surrounded by massive disks of gas and dust that are similar to protoplanetary disks around young stars. We assembled a catalog of all known Galactic post-AGB binaries with disks. We explore the correlations between the different observables with the aim of learning more about potential disk-binary interactions. We compiled spectral energy distributions of 85 Galactic post-AGB binary systems. We built a color-color diagram to differentiate between the different disk morphologies traced by the infrared excess. We categorized the different disk types and searched for correlations with other observational characteristics of these systems. Between 8 and 12% of our targets are surrounded by transition disks, that is, disks having no or low near-infrared excess. We find a strong link between these transition disks and the depletion of refractory elements on the surface of the post-AGB star. We interpret this link as evidence of a mechanism that stimulates the dust and gas separation within the disk and that also produces the transition disk structure. We propose that such a mechanism is likely to be due to a giant planet carving a hole in the disk, effectively trapping the dust in the outer disk parts. We propose disk evolutionary scenarios, depending on the presence of such a giant planet in the disk. We advocate that giant planets can successfully explain the link between the transition disks and the observed depletion of refractory materials. If the planetary scenario is confirmed, disks around post-AGB binaries could be a unique laboratory for testing planet-disk interactions and their influence on the late evolution of binary stars. The question of whether such planets are first- or second-generation bodies remains to be considered. We argue that these disks are ideal for studying planet formation in unprecedented parameter space.