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The Serendipitous Discovery of a Debris Disk around the A Dwarf HD 46190

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Published 2004 September 8 © 2004. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Printed in U.S.A.
, , Citation G. C. Sloan et al 2004 ApJ 614 L77 DOI 10.1086/425324

1538-4357/614/1/L77

Abstract

The Infrared Spectrograph on the Spitzer Space Telescope has observed several A dwarfs as potential standards and cross-calibrators, and one of these stars, HD 46190, shows the spectroscopic signature of a debris disk. The disk produces a spectral excess that can be fitted with a cool blackbody of ~81 K. If the emitting particles are spherical blackbodies, they would lie at a distance of ~82 AU from the central star. The spectrum from the disk can also be fitted with a spectrum rising proportionally with wavelength, and this spectral behavior is consistent with material falling into the inner disk as a result of Poynting-Robertson drag.

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10.1086/425324