The near-infrared reflected spectrum of source I in Orion-KL
Leonardo Testi (ESO), Jonathan C. Tan (UFlorida), Francesco Palla, (Arcetri)

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution near-infrared spectra of source I in Orion-KL to analyze its properties, suggesting it is a ~10 solar mass protostar with a high accretion rate, observed via scattered light in the outflow cavity.
Contribution
First detailed near-infrared spectral analysis of source I, providing insights into its mass, accretion rate, and disk properties, advancing understanding of massive star formation.
Findings
Spectrum resembles veiled, cool stellar photospheres with Teff 3500-4500 K.
Velocity dispersion of ~30 km/s consistent with a massive protostar disk.
Excludes source I being a rapidly rotating, very large protostar.
Abstract
Source I in the Orion-KL nebula is believed to be the nearest example of a massive star still in the main accretion phase. It is thus one of the best cases for studying the properties of massive protostars to constrain high-mass star formation theories. Near-infrared radiation from source I escapes through the cavity opened by the OMC1 outflow and is scattered by dust towards our line of sight. The reflected spectrum offers a unique possibility of observing the emission from the innermost regions of the system and probing the nature of source I and its immediate surroundings. We obtained moderately high spectral-resolution (R~9000) observations of the near-infrared diffuse emission in several locations around source I/Orion-KL. We observed a widespread rich absorption line spectrum that we compare with cool stellar photospheres and protostellar accretion disk models. The spectrum is…
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