UV spectropolarimetry with Polstar: protoplanetary disks
/ Authors
J. Wisniewski, A. Berdyugin, S. Berdyugina, W. Danchi, R. Dong, R. Oudmaijer, V. Airapetian, S. Brittain, K. Gayley, R. Ignace
and 7 more authors
M. Langlois, K. Lawson, J. Lomax, Evan A. Rich, Motohide Tamura, J. Vink, P. Scowen
/ Abstract
Polstar is a proposed NASA MIDEX mission that carries a high resolution UV spectropolarimeter capable of measure all four Stokes parameters onboard a 60 cm telescope. The mission has been designed to pioneer the field of time-domain UV spectropolarimetry. Time domain UV spectropolarimetry offers the best resource to determine the geometry and physical conditions of protoplanetary disks from the stellar surface to <5 AU. We detail two key objectives that a dedicated time domain UV spectropolarimetry survey, such as that enabled by Polstar or a similar mission concept, could achieve: 1) Test the hypothesis that magneto-accretion operating in young planet-forming disks around lower-mass stars transitions to boundary layer accretion in planet-forming disks around higher mass stars; and 2) Discriminate whether transient events in the innermost regions of planet-forming disks of intermediate mass stars are caused by inner disk mis-alignments or from stellar or disk emissions.
Journal: Astrophysics and Space Science