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Post Info TOPIC: HD 207129


L

Posts: 131433
Date:
Gliese 838
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Title: A Herschel resolved far-infrared dust ring around HD 207129
Authors: J.P. Marshall, T. Löhne, B. Montesinos, A.V. Krivov, C. Eiroa, O. Absil, G. Bryden, J. Maldonado, A. Mora, J. Sanz-Forcada, D. Ardila, J.-Ch. Augereau, A. Bayo, C. Del Burgo, W. Danchi, S. Ertel, D. Fedele, M. Fridlund, J. Lebreton, B.M. González-García, R. Liseau, G. Meeus, S. Müller, G.L. Pilbratt, A. Roberge, K. Stapelfeldt, P. Thébault, G.J. White, S. Wolf

Dusty debris discs around main sequence stars are thought to be the result of continuous collisional grinding of planetesimals in the system. The majority of these systems are unresolved and analysis of the dust properties is limited by the lack of information regarding the dust location. The Herschel DUNES key program is observing 133 nearby, Sun-like stars (<20 pc, FGK spectral type) in a volume limited survey to constrain the absolute incidence of cold dust around these stars by detection of far infrared excess emission at flux levels comparable to the Edgeworth-Kuiper belt (EKB). We have observed the Sun-like star HD 207129 with Herschel PACS and SPIRE. In all three PACS bands we resolve a ring-like structure consistent with scattered light observations. Using alpha Bootis as a reference point spread function (PSF), we deconvolved the images, clearly resolving the inner gap in the disc at both 70 and 100 {\mu}m. We have resolved the dust-producing planetesimal belt of a debris disc at 100 {\mu}m for the first time. We measure the radial profile and fractional luminosity of the disc, and compare the values to those of discs around stars of similar age and/or spectral type, placing this disc in context of other resolved discs observed by Herschel/DUNES.

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Posts: 131433
Date:
HD 207129
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HR 8323 is a G-type pre-main-sequence star in the constellation of Grus. It has an apparent visual magnitude of approximately 5.58. A debris disk has been imaged around this star in visible light using the ACS instrument on the Hubble Space Telescope; it has also been imaged in the infrared (70 m) using the MIPS instrument on the Spitzer Space Telescope. Based on the ACS image, the disk appears to have a radius of about 163 astronomical units and to be about 30 AU wide, and to be inclined at 60° to the plane of the sky.
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