The GRAVITY Young Stellar Object survey IV. The CO overtone emission in 51 Oph at sub-au scales
GRAVITY Collaboration: M. Koutoulaki, R. Garcia Lopez, A. Natta, R., Fedriani, A. Caratti oGaratti, T. P. Ray, D. Coffey, W. Brandner, C., Dougados, P.J.V Garcia, L. Klarmann, L. Labadie, K.Perraut, J., Sanchez-Bermudez, C. -C. Lin, A. Amorim, M. Baub\"ock, M. Benisty, J.P.

TL;DR
This study spatially resolved the inner gaseous disc of star 51 Oph, revealing hot CO emission within the dust sublimation radius, providing insights into the structure and composition of the innermost circumstellar environment.
Contribution
First interferometric spatial resolution of CO overtone emission in 51 Oph, showing CO originates from within the dust sublimation radius and characterizing its physical properties.
Findings
CO emission region is within 0.1 au of the star
CO gas temperature is 1900-2800 K
Disc inclination is 63 degrees
Abstract
51 Oph is a Herbig Ae/Be star that exhibits strong near-infrared CO ro-vibrational emission at 2.3 micron, most likely originating in the innermost regions of a circumstellar disc. We aim to obtain the physical and geometrical properties of the system by spatially resolving the circumstellar environment of the inner gaseous disc. We used the second-generation VLTI/GRAVITY to spatially resolve the continuum and the CO overtone emission. We obtained data over 12 baselines with the auxiliary telescopes and derive visibilities, and the differential and closure phases as a function of wavelength. We used a simple LTE ring model of the CO emission to reproduce the spectrum and CO line displacements. Our interferometric data show that the star is marginally resolved at our spatial resolution, with a radius of 10.58+-2.65 Rsun.The K-band continuum emission from the disc is inclined by 63+-1…
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