Hubble Space Telescope NICMOS Polarization Observations of Three Edge-on Massive YSOs
Janet P. Simpson (1,2), Michael G. Burton (3), Sean W. J. Colgan (1),, Angela S. Cotera (2), Edwin F. Erickson (1), Dean C. Hines (4), and Barbara, A. Whitney (4) ((1) NASA Ames Research Center, (2) SETI Institute, (3), University of New South Wales, (4) Space Science Institute)

TL;DR
This study uses Hubble's NICMOS to analyze the polarization and structure of disks and outflows in three massive young stellar objects, revealing complex geometries, possible binarity, and episodic ejection events.
Contribution
First high-resolution near-infrared polarization observations of massive YSOs revealing detailed disk and outflow structures and evidence of episodic ejection.
Findings
Discovered that the illuminating star in NGC 6334 V is offset from the lobes.
Identified that NIRS1 may be a close binary with precessing outflows.
Observed evidence of episodic ejection in all three YSOs.
Abstract
Massive young stellar objects (YSOs), like low-mass YSOs, appear to be surrounded by optically thick envelopes and/or disks and have regions, often bipolar, that are seen in polarized scattered light at near-infrared wavelengths. We are using the 0.2'' spatial resolution of NICMOS on Hubble Space Telescope to examine the structure of the disks and outflow regions of massive YSOs in star-forming regions within a few kpc of the Sun. Here we report on 2 micron polarimetry of NGC 6334 V and S255 IRS1. NGC 6334 V consists of a double-lobed bright reflection nebula seen against a dark region, probably an optically thick molecular cloud. Our polarization measurements show that the illuminating star lies ~ 2'' south of the line connecting the two lobes; we do not detect this star at 2 micron, but there are a small radio source and a mid-infrared source at this location. S255 IRS1 consists of…
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