A low optical depth region in the inner disk of the HerbigAe star HR5999
M. Benisty, S. Renard, A. Natta, J.P. Berger, F. Massi, F. Malbet,, P.J.V. Garcia, A. Isella, A. M\'erand, J.L. Monin, L. Testi, E. Thi\'ebaut,, M. Vannier, G. Weigelt

TL;DR
This study uses VLTI interferometry to image the inner disk of the HerbigAe star HR5999, revealing a low optical depth region inside the silicate sublimation radius and modeling its structure.
Contribution
It provides the first near-infrared images of HR5999's inner disk and models a low optical depth region inside the silicate sublimation radius.
Findings
Resolved a ring-like feature at ~0.65 AU
Detected a low surface brightness region inside the ring
Model confirms a low optical depth area inside the sublimation radius
Abstract
Circumstellar disks surrounding young stars are known to be the birthplaces of planets, and the innermost astronomical unit is of particular interest. We present new long-baseline spectro-interferometric observations of the HerbigAe star, HR5999, obtained in the H and K bands with the AMBER instrument at the VLTI, and aim to produce near-infrared images at the sub-AU spatial scale. We spatially resolve the circumstellar material and reconstruct images using the MiRA algorithm. In addition, we interpret the interferometric observations using models that assume that the near-infrared excess is dominated by the emission of a circumstellar disk. We compare the images reconstructed from the VLTI measurements to images obtained using simulated model data. The K-band image reveals three main elements: a ring-like feature located at ~0.65 AU, a low surface brightness region inside, and a…
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