VLTI-MATISSE L- And N- band aperture-synthesis imaging of the unclassified B[e] star FS Canis Majoris

Open Access
Authors
  • K.H. Hofmann
  • A. Bensberg
  • D. Schertl
  • G. Weigelt
  • S. Wolf
  • A. Meilland
  • F. Millour
  • L.B.F.M. Waters
  • S. Kraus
  • K. Ohnaka
  • B. Lopez
  • R.G. Petrov
  • S. Lagarde
  • Ph. Berio
  • F. Allouche
  • S. Robbe-Dubois
  • W. Jaffe
  • Th. Henning
  • C. Paladini
  • M. Schöller
  • A. Mérand
  • A. Glindemann
  • U. Beckmann
  • M. Heininger
  • F. Bettonvil
  • G. Zins
  • J. Woillez
  • P. Bristow
  • P. Stee
  • F. Vakili
  • R. Van Boekel
  • M.R. Hogerheijde
  • C. Dominik ORCID logo
  • J.C. Augereau
  • A. Matter
  • J. Hron
  • E. Pantin
  • Th. Rivinius
  • W.-J. De Wit
  • J. Varga
  • L. Klarmann
  • K. Meisenheimer
  • V. Gámez Rosas
  • L. Burtscher
  • J. Leftley
  • J.W. Isbell
  • G. Yoffe
  • E. Kokoulina
  • W.C. Danchi
  • P. Cruzalèbes
  • A. Domiciano De Souza
  • J. Drevon
  • V. Hocdé
  • A. Kreplin
  • L. Labadie
  • C. Connot
  • E. Nußbaum
  • M. Lehmitz
  • P. Antonelli
  • U. Graser
  • C. Leinert
Publication date 02-2022
Journal Astronomy and Astrophysics
Article number A81
Volume | Issue number 658
Number of pages 25
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
Context. FS Canis Majoris (FS CMa, HD 45677) is an unclassified B[e] star surrounded by an inclined dust disk. The evolutionary stage of FS CMa is still debated. Perpendicular to the circumstellar disk, a bipolar outflow was detected. Infrared aperture-synthesis imaging provides us with a unique opportunity to study the disk structure.
Aims. Our aim is to study the intensity distribution of the disk of FS CMa in the mid-infrared L and N bands.
Methods. We performed aperture-synthesis imaging of FS CMa with the MATISSE instrument (Multi AperTure mid-Infrared SpectroScopic Experiment) in the low spectral resolution mode to obtain images in the L and N bands. We computed radiative transfer models that reproduce the L- and N-band intensity distributions of the resolved disks.
Results. We present L- and N-band aperture-synthesis images of FS CMa reconstructed in the wavelength bands of 3.4–3.8 and 8.6–9.0 μm. In the L-band image, the inner rim region of an inclined circumstellar disk and the central object can be seen with a spatial resolution of 2.7 milliarcsec (mas). An inner disk cavity with an angular diameter of ~6 × 12 mas is resolved. The L-band disk consists of a bright northwestern (NW) disk region and a much fainter southeastern (SE) region. The images suggest that we are looking at the bright inner wall of the NW disk rim, which is on the far side of the disk. In the N band, only the bright NW disk region is seen. In addition to deriving the inclination and the inner disk radius, fitting the reconstructed brightness distributions via radiative transfer modelling allows one to constrain the innermost disk structure, in particular the shape of theinner disk rim.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202141601
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85124376226
Downloads
Permalink to this page
Back