Akimasa Kataoka
Heidelberg University
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Featured researches published by Akimasa Kataoka.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2013
Akimasa Kataoka; Hidekazu Tanaka; Satoshi Okuzumi; Koji Wada
Context: In planetesimal formation theory, several barriers have been proposed, which are bouncing, fragmentation, and radial drift problems. To understand the structure evolution of dust aggregates is a key in the planetesimal formation. Dust grains become fluffy by coagulation in protoplanetary disks. However, once they become fluffy, they are not sufficiently compressed by collisional compression to form compact planetesimals. Aims: We aim to reveal the pathway of the dust structure evolution from dust grains to compact planetesimals. Methods: Using the compressive strength formula, we analytically investigate how fluffy dust aggregates are compressed by static compression due to ram pressure of the disk gas and self gravity of the aggregates in protoplanetary disks. Results: We reveal the pathway of the porosity evolution from dust grains via fluffy aggregates to form planetesimals, circumventing the barriers in planetesimal formation. The aggregates are compressed by the disk gas to the density of 10^{-3} g/cm^3 in coagulation, which is more compact than the case with collisional compression. Then, they are compressed more by self gravity to 10^{-1} g/cm^3 when the radius is 10 km. Although the gas compression decelerate the growth, they grow enough rapidly to avoid the radial drift barrier when the orbital radius is < 6 AU in a typical disk. Conclusions: We propose fluffy dust growth scenario from grains to planetesimals. It enables the icy planetesimal formation in a wide range beyond the snowline in protoplanetary disks. This result proposes a concrete initial condition of planetesimals for the later stages of the planet formation.
Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan | 2013
Misato Fukagawa; Takashi Tsukagoshi; Munetake Momose; Kazuya Saigo; Nagayoshi Ohashi; Yoshimi Kitamura; Shu-ichiro Inutsuka; Takayuki Muto; Hideko Nomura; Taku Takeuchi; Hiroshi Kobayashi; Tomoyuki Hanawa; Eiji Akiyama; Mitsuhiko Honda; H. Fujiwara; Akimasa Kataoka; Sanemichi Z. Takahashi; Hiroshi Shibai
We report ALMA observations of dust continuum, 13CO J=3--2, and C18O J=3--2 line emission toward a gapped protoplanetary disk around HD 142527. The outer horseshoe-shaped disk shows the strong azimuthal asymmetry in dust continuum with the contrast of about 30 at 336 GHz between the northern peak and the southwestern minimum. In addition, the maximum brightness temperature of 24 K at its northern area is exceptionally high at 160 AU from a star. To evaluate the surface density in this region, the grain temperature needs to be constrained and was estimated from the optically thick 13CO J=3--2 emission. The lower limit of the peak surface density was then calculated to be 28 g cm-2 by assuming a canonical gas-to-dust mass ratio of 100. This finding implies that the region is locally too massive to withstand self-gravity since Toomres Q <~1--2, and thus, it may collapse into a gaseous protoplanet. Another possibility is that the gas mass is low enough to be gravitationally stable and only dust grains are accumulated. In this case, lower gas-to-dust ratio by at least 1 order of magnitude is required, implying possible formation of a rocky planetary core.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2015
Akimasa Kataoka; Takayuki Muto; Munetake Momose; Takashi Tsukagoshi; Misato Fukagawa; Hiroshi Shibai; Tomoyuki Hanawa; Koji Murakawa; Cornelis P. Dullemond
We present a new method to constrain the grain size in protoplanetary disks with polarization observations at millimeter wavelengths. If dust grains are grown to the size comparable to the wavelengths, the dust grains are expected to have a large scattering opacity and thus the continuum emission is expected to be polarized due to self-scattering. We perform 3D radiative transfer calculations to estimate the polarization degree for the protoplanetary disks having radial Gaussian-like dust surface density distributions, which have been recently discovered. The maximum grain size is set to be
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2014
Akimasa Kataoka; Satoshi Okuzumi; Hidekazu Tanaka; Hideko Nomura
100 {\rm~\mu m}
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2013
Akimasa Kataoka; Hidekazu Tanaka; Satoshi Okuzumi; Koji Wada
and the observing wavelength to be 870
The Astrophysical Journal | 2016
Akimasa Kataoka; Takayuki Muto; Munetake Momose; Takashi Tsukagoshi; Cornelis P. Dullemond
{\rm \mu m}
The Astrophysical Journal | 2012
Akimasa Kataoka; Masahiro N. Machida; Kohji Tomisaka
. We find that the polarization degree is as high as 2.5 % with a subarcsec spatial resolution, which is likely to be detected with near-future ALMA observations. The emission is polarized due to scattering of anisotropic continuum emission. The map of the polarization degree shows a double peaked distribution and the polarization vectors are in the radial direction in the inner ring and in the azimuthal direction in the outer ring. We also find the wavelength dependence of the polarization degree: the polarization degree is the highest if dust grains have a maximum size of
The Astrophysical Journal | 2017
Yusuke Tsukamoto; Satoshi Okuzumi; Akimasa Kataoka
a_{\rm max}\sim\lambda/2\pi
The Astrophysical Journal | 2016
Ryo Tazaki; Hidekazu Tanaka; Satoshi Okuzumi; Akimasa Kataoka; Hideko Nomura
, where
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016
A. Pohl; Akimasa Kataoka; P. Pinilla; Cornelis P. Dullemond; Th. Henning; T. Birnstiel
\lambda