Near-infrared interferometric observation of the Herbig Ae star HD144432 with VLTI/AMBER
Lei Chen, Alexander Kreplin, Yang Wang, Gerd Weigelt, Karl-Heinz, Hofmann, Stefan Kraus, Dieter Schertl, Stephane Lagarde, Antonella Natta,, Roman Petrov, Sylvie Robbe-Dubois, Eric Tatulli

TL;DR
This study uses near-infrared interferometry to analyze the inner dust disk of the Herbig Ae star HD144432, revealing a two-component disk structure with a bright inner rim and an extended outer disk, including a possible disk gap.
Contribution
First near-infrared interferometric analysis of HD144432's inner disk, modeling its structure with geometric and temperature-gradient models, revealing a two-component disk with a gap.
Findings
K-band ring radius of 0.17 AU
Disk consists of a bright inner rim and an extended outer component
Evidence of a disk gap possibly caused by a puffed-up inner rim
Abstract
We study the sub-AU-scale circumstellar environment of the Herbig Ae star HD144432 with near-infrared (NIR) VLTI/AMBER observations to investigate the structure of its inner dust disk. The interferometric observations were carried out with the AMBER instrument in the H and K band. We interpret the measured H- and K-band visibilities, the near- and mid-infrared visibilities from the literature, and the SED of HD144432 by using geometric ring models and ring-shaped temperature-gradient disk models with power-law temperature distributions. We derived a K-band ring-fit radius of 0.17 \pm 0.01 AU and an H-band radius of 0.18 \pm 0.01 AU (for a distance of 145 pc). This measured K-band radius of \sim0.17 AU lies in the range between the dust sublimation radius of \sim0.13 AU (predicted for a dust sublimation temperature of 1500 K and gray dust) and the prediction of models including…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
