The origin of hydrogen line emission for five Herbig Ae/Be stars spatially resolved by VLTI/AMBER spectro-interferometry
S. Kraus, K.-H. Hofmann, M. Benisty, J.-P. Berger, O. Chesneau, A., Isella, F. Malbet, A. Meilland, N. Nardetto, A. Natta, T. Preibisch, D., Schertl, M. Smith, P. Stee, E. Tatulli, L. Testi, G. Weigelt

TL;DR
This study uses VLTI/AMBER spectro-interferometry to spatially resolve the BrG emission regions in five Herbig Ae/Be stars, revealing different emission mechanisms such as magnetospheric accretion and stellar or disk winds.
Contribution
First spatially resolved the BrG emission in five Herbig Ae/Be stars, distinguishing between accretion and wind emission mechanisms using interferometry.
Findings
BrG-emitting regions are more compact than dust sublimation radius.
Magnetospheric accretion explains the emission in HD98922.
Stellar or disk winds are likely in other observed stars.
Abstract
To trace the accretion and outflow processes around YSOs, diagnostic spectral lines such as the BrG 2.166 micron line are widely used, although due to a lack of spatial resolution, the origin of the line emission is still unclear. Employing the AU-scale spatial resolution which can be achieved with infrared long-baseline interferometry, we aim to distinguish between theoretical models which associate the BrG line emission with mass infall or mass outflow processes. Using the VLTI/AMBER instrument, we spatially and spectrally (R=1500) resolved the inner environment of five Herbig Ae/Be stars (HD163296, HD104237, HD98922, MWC297, V921Sco) in the BrG emission line as well as in the adjacent continuum. All objects (except MWC297) show an increase of visibility within the BrG emission line, indicating that the BrG-emitting region in these objects is more compact than the dust sublimation…
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