Near-Infrared Imaging of a Spiral in the CQ Tau Disk
astro-ph.EP
/ Authors
Taichi Uyama, Takayuki Muto, Dimitri Mawet, Valentin Christiaens, Jun Hashimoto, Tomoyuki Kudo, Masayuki Kuzuhara, Garreth Ruane, Charles Beichman, Olivier Absil
and 21 more authors
Eiji Akiyama, Jaehan Bae, Michael Bottom, Elodie Choquet, Thayne Currie, Ruobing Dong, Katherine B. Follette, Misato Fukagawa, Greta Guidi, Elsa Huby, Jungmi Kwon, Satoshi Mayama, Tiffany Meshkat, Maddalena Reggiani, Luca Ricci, Eugene Serabyn, Motohide Tamura, Leonardo Testi, Nicole Wallack, Jonathan Williams, Zhaohuan Zhu
/ Abstract
We present $L^\prime$-band Keck/NIRC2 imaging and $H$-band Subaru/AO188+HiCIAO polarimetric observations of CQ Tau disk with a new spiral arm. Apart from the spiral feature our observations could not detect any companion candidates. We traced the spiral feature from the $r^2$-scaled HiCIAO polarimetric intensity image and the fitted result is used for forward modeling to reproduce the ADI-reduced NIRC2 image. We estimated the original surface brightness after throughput correction in $L^\prime$-band to be $\sim126$ mJy/arcsec$^2$ at most. We suggest that the grain temperature of the spiral may be heated up to $\sim$200 K in order to explain both of the $H$- and $L^{\prime}$-bands results. The $H$-band emission at the location of the spiral originates from the scattering from the disk surface while both scattering and thermal emission may contribute to the $L^{\prime}$-band emission. If the central star is only the light source of scattered light, the spiral emission at $L^\prime$-band should be thermal emission. If an inner disk also acts as the light source, the scattered light and the thermal emission may equally contribute to the $L^\prime$-band spiral structure.