Detection of an inner gaseous component in a Herbig Be star accretion disk: Near- and mid-infrared spectro-interferometry and radiative transfer modeling of MWC 147
Stefan Kraus, Thomas Preibisch, and Keiichi Ohnaka

TL;DR
This study combines spectro-interferometry and radiative transfer modeling to reveal that the inner gaseous disk dominates NIR emission in the Herbig Be star MWC 147, challenging traditional dust-based models.
Contribution
It demonstrates that an active gaseous inner disk explains the observed interferometric data better than passive dust models, providing new insights into star-disk interactions.
Findings
Inner gaseous disk dominates NIR emission.
Passive dust models are inconsistent with interferometric sizes.
Active gaseous disk models fit both SED and visibilities.
Abstract
We study the geometry and the physical conditions in the inner (AU-scale) circumstellar region around the young Herbig Be star MWC 147 using long-baseline spectro-interferometry in the near-infrared (NIR K-band, VLTI/AMBER observations and PTI archive data) as well as the mid-infrared (MIR N-band, VLTI/MIDIobservations). The emission from MWC 147 is clearly resolved and has a characteristic physical size of approx. 1.3 AU and 9 AU at 2.2 micron and 11 micron respectively (Gaussian diameter). The spectrally dispersed AMBER and MIDI interferograms both show a strong increase in the characteristic size towards longer wavelengths, much steeper than predicted by analytic disk models assuming power-law radial temperature distributions. We model the interferometric data and the spectral energy distribution of MWC 147 with 2-D, frequency-dependent radiation transfer simulations. This analysis…
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