The VLTI/MIDI survey of massive young stellar objects - Sounding the
inner regions around intermediate- and high-mass young stars using
mid-infrared interferometry
We aim to characterize the distribution and composition of circumstellar
material around young massive stars, and to investigate exactly which physical
structures in these objects are probed by long-baseline mid-infrared
interferometric observations. We used the two-telescope interferometric
instrument MIDI of the Very Large Telescope Interferometer of the European
Southern Observatory to observe a sample of 24 intermediate- and high-mass
young stellar objects in the N band (8-13 micron). We had successful fringe
detections for 20 objects, and present spectrally-resolved correlated fluxes
and visibility levels for projected baselines of up to 128 m. We fit the
visibilities with geometric models to derive the sizes of the emitting regions,
as well as the orientation and elongation of the circumstellar material.
Fourteen objects in the sample show the 10 micron silicate feature in
absorption in the total and correlated flux spectra. For 13 of these objects,
we were able to fit the correlated flux spectra with a simple absorption model,
allowing us to constrain the composition and absorptive properties of the
circumstellar material. Nearly all of the massive young stellar objects
observed show significant deviations from spherical symmetry at mid-infrared
wavelengths. In general, the mid-infrared emission can trace both disks and
outflows, and in many cases it may be difficult to disentangle these components
on the basis of interferometric data alone, because of the sparse spatial
frequency coverage normally provided by current long-baseline interferometers.
For the majority of the objects in this sample, the absorption occurs on
spatial scales larger than those probed by MIDI. Finally, the physical extent
of the mid-infrared emission around these sources is correlated with the total
luminosity, albeit with significant scatter.Comment: 36 pages, 22 figures. Accepted to Astronomy and Astrophysic