Constraints on the Radial Variation of Grain Growth in the AS 209 Circumstellar Disk
astro-ph.SR
/ Authors
Laura M. Pérez, John M. Carpenter, Claire J. Chandler, Andrea Isella, Sean M. Andrews, Luca Ricci, Nuria Calvet, Stuartt A. Corder, Adam T. Deller, Cornelis P. Dullemond
and 11 more authors
Jane S. Greaves, Robert J. Harris, Thomas Henning, Woojin Kwon, Joseph Lazio, Hendrik Linz, Lee G. Mundy, Anneila I. Sargent, Shaye Storm, Leonardo Testi, David J. Wilner
/ Abstract
We present dust continuum observations of the protoplanetary disk surrounding the pre-main sequence star AS 209, spanning more than an order of magnitude in wavelength from 0.88 to 9.8 mm. The disk was observed with sub-arcsecond angular resolution (0.2"-0.5") to investigate radial variations in its dust properties. At longer wavelengths, the disk emission structure is notably more compact, providing model-independent evidence for changes in the grain properties across the disk. We find that physical models which reproduce the disk emission require a radial dependence of the dust opacity κ_ν. Assuming that the observed wavelength-dependent structure can be attributed to radial variations in the dust opacity spectral index (β), we find that β(R) increases from β<0.5 at \sim20 AU to β>1.5 for R>80 AU, inconsistent with a constant value of β across the disk (at the 10σ level). Furthermore, if radial variations of κ_ν are caused by particle growth, we find that the maximum size of the particle-size distribution (a_{max}) increases from sub-millimeter-sized grains in the outer disk (R>70 AU) to millimeter and centimeter-sized grains in the inner disk regions (R< 70 AU). We compare our observational constraint on a_{max}(R) with predictions from physical models of dust evolution in proto-planetary disks. For the dust composition and particle-size distribution investigated here, our observational constraints on a_{max}(R) are consistent with models where the maximum grain size is limited by radial drift.