We present the first mid-infrared interferometric measurements of FU Orionis.
We clearly resolve structures that are best explained with an optically thick
accretion disk. A simple accretion disk model fits the observed SED and
visibilities reasonably well and does not require the presence of any
additional structure such as a dusty envelope. The inclination and also the
position angle of the disk can be constrained from the multibaseline
interferometric observations. Our disk model is in general agreement with most
published near-infrared interferometric measurements. From the shape and
strength of the 8-13 micrometer spectrum the dust composition of the accretion
disk is derived for the first time. We conclude that most dust particles are
amorphous and already much larger than those typically observed in the ISM.
Although the high accretion rate of the system provides both, high temperatures
out to large radii and an effective transport mechanism to distribute
crystalline grains, we do not see any evidence for crystalline silicates
neither in the total spectrum nor in the correlated flux spectra from the inner
disk regions. Possible reasons for this non-detection are mentioned. All
results are discussed in context with other high-spatial resolution
observations of FU Ori and other FU Ori objects. We also address the question
whether FU Ori is in a younger evolutionary stage than a classical TTauri star.Comment: 41 pages (aastex style), 11 figures, 8 tables, accepted by Ap