Optical and near-infrared view of planet-forming disks and protoplanets

Authors
  • C. Ginski
  • J. Hashimoto
  • M. Keppler
  • W. Kley
  • J. Monnier
Publication date 2022
Host editors
  • S. Inutsuka
  • Y. Aikawa
  • T. Muto
  • K. Tomida
  • M. Tamura
Book title Protostars and Planets VII
Book subtitle Proceedings of a conference held at Kyoto, Japan, 10-15 april 2023
ISBN
  • 9781583819555
ISBN (electronic)
  • 978583819562
Series Astronomical Society of the Pacific conference series
Pages (from-to) 605-644
Publisher San Francisco: Astronomical Society of the Pacific (ASP)
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
In this chapter of the Protostars and Planets VII, we review the breakthrough progress that has been made in the field of high-resolution, high-contrast optical and near-infrared imaging of planet-forming disks. These advancements include the direct detection of protoplanets embedded in some disks, and derived limits on planetary masses in others. Morphological substructures, including: rings, spirals, arcs, and shadows, are seen in all imaged infrared-bright disks to date, and are ubiquitous across spectral types. These substructures are believed to be the result of disk evolution processes, and in particular disk-planet interactions. Since small dust grains that scatter light are tightly bound to the disk's gas, these observations closely trace disk structures predicted by hydrodynamical models and serve as observational tests of the predictions of planet formation theories. We argue that the results of current and next-generation high-contrast imaging surveys will, when combined with complementary data from ALMA, lead to a much deeper understanding of the co-evolution of disks and planets, and the mechanisms by which planets form.
Document type Conference contribution
Language English
Published at https://www.aspbooks.org/a/volumes/article_details?paper_id=40761
Other links https://www.aspbooks.org/a/volumes/table_of_contents/?book_id=620
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