Infrared interferometric imaging of the compact dust disk around the AGB star HR3126 with the bipolar Toby Jug Nebula
Keiichi Ohnaka, Dieter Schertl, Karl-Heinz Hofmann, and Gerd Weigelt

TL;DR
This study uses infrared interferometry and imaging to reveal a compact, inclined dust disk and bipolar nebula around the AGB star HR3126, providing insights into the late-stage evolution of such stars.
Contribution
First direct imaging and modeling of the inner dust disk around HR3126, linking disk structure to bipolar nebula formation at the end of the AGB phase.
Findings
Detected a compact elliptical dust ring with a 2 au inner radius.
Revealed elongated CO emission suggesting a gas disk or stellar oblateness.
No companion detected, constraining binary interaction scenarios.
Abstract
The asymptotic giant branch (AGB) star HR3126, associated with the arcminute-scale bipolar Toby Jug Nebula, provides a rare opportunity to study the emergence of bipolar structures at the end of the AGB phase. We carried out long-baseline interferometric observations with AMBER and GRAVITY (2--2.45 micron) at the Very Large Telescope Interferometer, speckle interferometric observations with VLT/NACO (2.24 micron), and imaging with SPHERE-ZIMPOL (0.55 micron) and VISIR (7.9--19.5 micron). The images reconstructed in the continuum at 2.1--2.29 micron from the AMBER+GRAVITY data reveal the central star surrounded by an elliptical ring-like structure with a semimajor and semiminor axis of 5.3 and 3.5 mas, respectively. The ring is interpreted as the inner rim of an equatorial dust disk viewed from an inclination angle of ~50 degrees, and its axis is approximately aligned with the bipolar…
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