A dense disk of dust around the born-again Sakurai's object
Olivier Chesneau (FIZEAU), G.C. Clayton (LSU), F. Lykou (the, University of Manchester), O. De Marco (AMNH), Ch. Hummel (ESO), F. Kerber, (ESO), E. Lagadec (the University of Manchester), J. Nordhaus (Princeton, University), A.A. Zijlstra (the University of Manchester)

TL;DR
This study used high-resolution mid-infrared interferometry to discover and characterize a compact, inclined dust disk around Sakurai's object, revealing insights into its circumstellar environment and shaping mechanisms.
Contribution
First high-angular resolution observations of Sakurai's dust envelope, revealing a compact, inclined dust disk and constraining its physical properties.
Findings
Discovered a compact (105 x 140 AU) dust disk around Sakurai's object.
Estimated disk inclination at 75 degrees with a large scale height.
Found the disk's major axis aligned with asymmetries in the old planetary nebula.
Abstract
In 1996, Sakurai's object (V4334 Sgr) suddenly brightened in the centre of a faint Planetary Nebula (PN). This very rare event was interpreted as the reignition of a hot white dwarf that caused a rapid evolution back to the cool giant phase. From 1998 on, a copious amount of dust has formed continuously, screening out the star which has remained embedded in this expanding high optical depth envelope. The new observations, reported here, are used to study the morphology of the circumstellar dust in order to investigate the hypothesis that Sakurai's Object is surrounded by a thick spherical envelope of dust. We have obtained unprecedented, high-angular resolution spectro-interferometric observations, taken with the mid-IR interferometer MIDI/VLTI, which resolve the dust envelope of Sakurai's object. We report the discovery of a unexpectedly compact (30 x 40 milliarcsec, 105 x 140 AU…
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