A silicate disk in the heart of the Ant
Olivier Chesneau (LG), Foteini Lykou (LG, Universtiy Manchester),, Bruce Balick (Univ. Washington), Eric Lagadec (LG, Universtiy Manchester),, Mikako Matsuura (Universtiy Manchester), Nathan Smith (Univ. California),, Alain Spang (LG), Sebastian Wolf (MPIA)

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution infrared interferometry and adaptive optics to reveal an edge-on silicate disk in the bipolar planetary nebula Menzel 3, providing insights into its structure and formation process.
Contribution
It presents the first direct detection and detailed modeling of a silicate disk in Menzel 3, constraining its geometry, composition, and relation to bipolar shaping.
Findings
Disk is edge-on with a major axis perpendicular to bipolar lobes.
Disk contains amorphous silicate, indicating youth.
Disk mass is small compared to lobes, possibly a relic of ejection.
Abstract
We aim at getting high spatial resolution information on the dusty core of bipolar planetary nebulae to directly constrain the shaping process. Methods: We present observations of the dusty core of the extreme bipolar planetary nebula Menzel 3 (Mz 3, Hen 2-154, the Ant) taken with the mid-infrared interferometer MIDI/VLTI and the adaptive optics NACO/VLT. The core of Mz 3 is clearly resolved with MIDI in the interferometric mode, whereas it is unresolved from the Ks to the N bands with single dish 8.2 m observations on a scale ranging from 60 to 250 mas. A striking dependence of the dust core size with the PA angle of the baselines is observed, that is highly suggestive of an edge-on disk whose major axis is perpendicular to the axis of the bipolar lobes. The MIDI spectrum and the visibilities of Mz 3 exhibit a clear signature of amorphous silicate, in contrast to the signatures of…
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