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Multiwavelength continuum sizes of protoplanetary discs: scaling relations and implications for grain growth and radial drift

Marco Tazzari, C. J. Clarke, L. Testi, Jonathan P. Williams, Stefano Facchini, C. F. Manara, A. Natta, Giovanni Rosotti

2021Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society73 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

ABSTRACT We analyse spatially resolved ALMA observations at 0.9, 1.3, and 3.1 mm for the 26 brightest protoplanetary discs in the Lupus star-forming region. We characterize the discs multiwavelength brightness profiles by fitting the interferometric visibilities in a homogeneous way, obtaining effective disc sizes at the three wavelengths, spectral index profiles, and optical depth estimates. We report three fundamental discoveries: first, the millimetre continuum size–luminosity relation already observed at 0.9 mm is also present at 1.3 mm with an identical slope, and at 3.1 mm with a steeper slope, confirming that emission at longer wavelengths becomes increasingly optically thin. Second, when observed at 3.1 mm the discs appear to be only 9 per cent smaller than when observed at 0.9 mm, in tension with models of dust evolution that predict a starker difference. Third, by forward modelling the sample of measurements with a simple parametric disc model, we find that the presence of large grains ($a_\mathrm{max}\gt 1\,$ mm) throughout the discs is the most favoured explanation for all discs as it reproduces simultaneously their spectral indices, optical depth, luminosity, and radial extent in the 0.9–1.3 mm wavelength range. We also find that the observations can be alternatively interpreted with the discs being dominated by optically thick, unresolved, substructures made of mm-sized grains with a high scattering albedo.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsScalingAstrophysicsProtoplanetary diskPlanetGeometryMathematicsAstrophysics and Star Formation StudiesStellar, planetary, and galactic studiesMolecular Spectroscopy and Structure