Live Poster Session: Zoom Link
Thursday, July 30th 1:15-2:30pm EDT
Abstract: Debris disks are tenuous, dusty belts surrounding main sequence stars generated by collisions between planetesimals. HD 206893 is one of only two stars known to host a directly imaged brown dwarf orbiting interior to its debris ring, in this case at a projected separation of 10.4 au. A brown dwarf is an object between 15 and 75 times the mass of Jupiter. I resolve the structure in the debris disk around HD 206893 at an angular resolution of 24 pc and wavelength of 1.3mm with the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA). I observe a broad disk using parametric MCMC models to fit the structure of the disk and find strong evidence for a gap in the disk, suggestive of an additional planetary-mass companion. The inner edge of the debris disk is only marginally resolved, yielding a constraint on the mass of the directly imaged companion.
Ava_Summer_Poster2020-Ava-NederlanderLive Poster Session: Zoom Link
Thursday, July 30th 1:15-2:30pm EDT