Is the Protoplanetary Disk of TW Hydrae on the Verge of Dispersal?

What makes exoplanets habitable? BARBARA ERCOLANO pursues this overarching question by focusing on the birth sites of these planets. Planets are born in the circumstellar disk that surrounds every young star. The specific research question presented in this video centers on the star TW Hydrae, which is very close to earth. The researchers investigated whether the T Tauri star “TW Hydrae” has a protoplanetary disk that is on the verge of dispersal. At this stage these disks affect the formation of planetary systems. Observations from ALMA (Atacama Large Millimeter Array) show that there is a hole at the center of TW Hydrae. Using numerical simulations to construct a theoretical model that fits all the observations of the star, the researchers established that the most likely explanation of this hole is that TW Hydrae is really about to disperse. This finding suggests TW Hydrae as a perfect case study for understanding this crucial element in the development of protoplanetary disks.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21036/LTPUB10438

Ludwig Maximilian University Munich (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München)

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Ludwig Maximilian University Munich (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München)

Original Publication

The Dispersal of Planet-forming Discs: Theory Confronts Observations

Barbara Ercolano

,

Ilaria Pascucci

Published in 2017

A Photoevaporative Gap in the Closest Planet-forming Disc

Barbara Ercolano

,

Giovanni Rosotti

,

Giovanni Picogna

,

L. Testi

Published in 2016

The Link Between Disc Dispersal by Photoevaporation and the Semimajor Axis Distribution of Exoplanets

Barbara Ercolano

,

Giovanni Rosotti

Published in 2015