We present observations of the debris disk around gamma Doradus, an F1V star,
from the Herschel Key Programme DEBRIS (Disc Emission via Bias-free
Reconnaissance in the Infrared/Submillimetre). The disk is well-resolved at 70,
100 and 160 micron, resolved along its major axis at 250 micron, detected but
not resolved at 350 micron, and confused with a background source at 500
micron. It is one of our best resolved targets and we find it to have a
radially broad dust distribution. The modelling of the resolved images cannot
distinguish between two configurations: an arrangement of a warm inner ring at
several AU (best-fit 4 AU) and a cool outer belt extending from ~55 to 400 AU
or an arrangement of two cool, narrow rings at ~70 AU and ~190 AU. This
suggests that any configuration between these two is also possible. Both models
have a total fractional luminosity of ~10^{-5} and are consistent with the disk
being aligned with the stellar equator. The inner edge of either possible
configuration suggests that the most likely region to find planets in this
system would be within ~55 AU of the star. A transient event is not needed to
explain the warm dust's fractional luminosity.Comment: 12 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in Ap