Confronting Standard Models of Proto--Planetary Disks With New Mid--Infrared Sizes from the Keck Interferometer
Rafael Millan-Gabet, Xiao Che, John D. Monnier, Michael L. Sitko, Ray, W. Russell, Carol A.Grady, Amanda N. Day, R. B. Perry, Tim J. Harries, Alicia, N. Aarnio, Mark M. Colavita, Peter L. Wizinowich, Sam Ragland, Julien Woillez

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution infrared interferometry to measure the sizes of disks around young stars, revealing that standard models are insufficient and proposing a two-rim disk model for better accuracy.
Contribution
It demonstrates that traditional flared disk models fail to match mid-infrared observations, and introduces a two-rim model with smaller grains that better fits the data.
Findings
Standard models fail to reproduce mid-infrared sizes
Two-rim model significantly improves fit to observations
Mid-infrared disk size correlates with stellar luminosity
Abstract
We present near and mid-infrared interferometric observations made with the Keck Interferometer Nuller and near-contemporaneous spectro-photometry from the IRTF of 11 well known young stellar objects, several observed for the first time in these spectral and spatial resolution regimes. With AU-level spatial resolution, we first establish characteristic sizes of the infrared emission using a simple geometrical model consisting of a hot inner rim and mid-infrared disk emission. We find a high degree of correlation between the stellar luminosity and the mid-infrared disk sizes after using near-infrared data to remove the contribution from the inner rim. We then use a semi-analytical physical model to also find that the very widely used "star + inner dust rim + flared disk" class of models strongly fails to reproduce the SED and spatially-resolved mid-infrared data simultaneously;…
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