Gas Distribution, Kinematics, and Excitation Structure in the Disks around the Classical Be Stars Beta Canis Minoris and Zeta Tauri
Stefan Kraus, John D. Monnier, Xiao Che, Gail H. Schaefer, Yamina, Touhami, Douglas R. Gies, Jason Aufdenberg, Fabien Baron, Nathalie Thureau,, Theo A. Brummelaar, Harold McAlister, Nils H. Turner, Judit Sturmann, Laszlo, Sturmann

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution optical interferometry to analyze the gas distribution and kinematics in the disks around two classical Be stars, deriving stellar and disk parameters and testing disk formation models.
Contribution
It provides the first dynamical mass estimate for Beta Canis Minoris and spatially resolves multiple hydrogen emission lines in Zeta Tauri, constraining disk rotation laws and formation scenarios.
Findings
The disk around Beta Canis Minoris is in Keplerian rotation.
Different hydrogen emission lines originate from distinct radii in the disk.
Results support viscous decretion disk models over wind compression models.
Abstract
Using CHARA and VLTI near-infrared spectro-interferometry with hectometric baseline lengths (up to 330m) and with high spectral resolution (up to 12000), we studied the gas distribution and kinematics around two classical Be stars. The combination of high spatial and spectral resolution achieved allows us to constrain the gas velocity field on scales of a few stellar radii and to obtain, for the first time in optical interferometry, a dynamical mass estimate using the position-velocity analysis technique known from radio astronomy. For our first target star, Beta Canis Minoris, we model the H+K-band continuum and Br-gamma line geometry with a near-critical rotating stellar photosphere and a geometrically thin equatorial disk. Testing different disk rotation laws, we find that the disk is in Keplerian rotation (v(r)=r^(-0.5+/-0.1)) and derive the disk position angle (140+/-1.7 deg),…
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