4,996 research outputs found
Born Again Protoplanetary Disk Around Mira B
The Mira AB system is a nearby (~107 pc) example of a wind accreting binary
star system. In this class of system, the wind from a mass-losing red giant
star (Mira A) is accreted onto a companion (Mira B), as indicated by an
accretion shock signature in spectra at ultraviolet and X-ray wavelengths.
Using novel imaging techniques, we report the detection of emission at
mid-infrared wavelengths between 9.7 and 18.3 m from the vicinity of Mira
B but with a peak at a radial position about 10 AU closer to the primary Mira
A. We interpret the mid-infrared emission as the edge of an optically-thick
accretion disk heated by Mira A. The discovery of this new class of accretion
disk fed by M-giant mass loss implies a potential population of young planetary
systems in white-dwarf binaries which has been little explored, despite being
relatively common in the solar neighborhood.Comment: Accepted for Ap
Mid-infrared size survey of Young Stellar Objects: Description of Keck segment-tilting experiment and basic results
The mid-infrared properties of pre-planetary disks are sensitive to the
temperature and flaring profiles of disks for the regions where planet
formation is expected to occur. In order to constrain theories of planet
formation, we have carried out a mid-infrared (wavelength 10.7 microns) size
survey of young stellar objects using the segmented Keck telescope in a novel
configuration. We introduced a customized pattern of tilts to individual mirror
segments to allow efficient sparse-aperture interferometry, allowing full
aperture synthesis imaging with higher calibration precision than traditional
imaging. In contrast to previous surveys on smaller telescopes and with poorer
calibration precision, we find most objects in our sample are partially
resolved. Here we present the main observational results of our survey of 5
embedded massive protostars, 25 Herbig Ae/Be stars, 3 T Tauri stars, 1 FU Ori
system, and 5 emission-line objects of uncertain classification. The observed
mid-infrared sizes do not obey the size-luminosity relation found at
near-infrared wavelengths and a companion paper will provide further modelling
analysis of this sample. In addition, we report imaging results for a few of
the most resolved objects, including complex emission around embedded massive
protostars, the photoevaporating circumbinary disk around MWC 361A, and the
subarcsecond binaries T Tau, FU Ori and MWC 1080.Comment: Accepted by Astrophysical Journal. 38 pages. 9 figure
- …