A high-mass protobinary system with spatially resolved circumstellar accretion disks and circumbinary disk
Stefan Kraus, Jacques Kluska, Alexander Kreplin, Matthew Bate, Tim J., Harries, Karl-Heinz Hofmann, Edward Hone, John D. Monnier, Gerd Weigelt,, Narsireddy Anugu, Willem-Jan de Wit, Markus Wittkowski

TL;DR
This study reports the discovery and detailed imaging of a high-mass protobinary system with spatially resolved circumstellar and circumbinary disks, providing new insights into the early stages of high-mass star formation.
Contribution
First high-mass protobinary with spatially resolved circumstellar and circumbinary disks, revealing disk misalignment and accretion dynamics with high-resolution interferometry.
Findings
Discovered a close high-mass protobinary with resolved disks.
Found disks are strongly misaligned with the binary axis.
Observed higher accretion rate onto the secondary component.
Abstract
High-mass multiples might form via fragmentation of self-gravitational disks or alternative scenarios such as disk-assisted capture. However, only few observational constraints exist on the architecture and disk structure of high-mass protobinaries and their accretion properties. Here we report the discovery of a close (mas=170au) high-mass protobinary, IRAS17216-3801, where our VLTI/GRAVITY+AMBER near-infrared interferometry allows us to image the circumstellar disks around the individual components with 3 milliarcsecond resolution. We estimate the component masses to and and find that the radial intensity profiles can be reproduced with an irradiated disk model, where the inner regions are excavated of dust, likely tracing the dust sublimation region in these disks. The circumstellar disks are strongly misaligned with respect to the binary…
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