An interferometric study of the post-AGB binary 89 Herculis. II Radiative transfer models of the circumbinary disk
M. Hillen, J. Menu, H. Van Winckel, M. Min, C. Gielen, T. Wevers, G., D. Mulders, S. Regibo, T. Verhoelst

TL;DR
This study uses detailed radiative transfer modeling to analyze the circumbinary disk around 89 Herculis, aiming to distinguish between disk and outflow origins of optical flux and to fit multi-wavelength observational data.
Contribution
It introduces comprehensive dust radiative transfer models including dust settling and scattering to interpret interferometric and photometric data of 89 Her.
Findings
A smooth inner disk rim is required to fit near-IR data.
Best-fit models include mm-sized grains settled in the disk midplane.
Optical data cannot be fit by a passive disk alone; an outflow or halo component is needed.
Abstract
The presence of disks and outflows is widespread among post-AGB binaries. In the first paper of this series, a surprisingly large fraction of optical light was found to be resolved in the 89 Her post-AGB system. The data showed this flux to arise from close to the central binary. Scattering off the inner rim of the circumbinary disk, or in a dusty outflow were suggested as two possible origins. With detailed dust radiative transfer models of the disk we aim to discriminate between these two configurations. By including Herschel/SPIRE photometry, we extend the SED such that it now fully covers UV to sub-mm wavelengths. The MCMax radiative transfer code is used to create a large grid of disk models. Our models include a self-consistent treatment of dust settling as well as of scattering. A Si-rich composition with two additional opacity sources, metallic Fe or amorphous C, are tested. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · High-pressure geophysics and materials
