VLTI images of circumbinary disks around evolved stars
Jacques Kluska, Rik Claes, Akke Corporaal, Hans Van Winckel, Javier, Alcolea, Narsireddy Anugu, Jean-Philippe Berger, Dylan Bollen, Valentin, Bujarrabal, Robert Izzard, Devika Kamath, Stefan Kraus, Jean-Baptiste Le, Bouquin, Michiel Min, John D. Monnier, Hans Olofsson

TL;DR
This paper discusses the use of VLTI interferometric imaging to resolve and analyze the complex circumbinary disks around evolved binary stars, highlighting recent imaging successes and ongoing observational programs.
Contribution
It presents the application of advanced VLTI image reconstruction techniques to study circumbinary disks around post-AGB stars, demonstrating the capability to resolve complex morphologies.
Findings
First interferometric image of a circumbinary disk around IRAS08544-4431
Revealed unexpected features in the circumbinary environment
Initiated a large VLTI imaging program for post-AGB binaries
Abstract
The new generation of VLTI instruments (GRAVITY, MATISSE) aims to produce routinely interferometric images to uncover the morphological complexity of different objects at high angular resolution. Image reconstruction is, however, not a fully automated process. Here we focus on a specific science case, namely the complex circumbinary environments of a subset of evolved binaries, for which interferometric imaging provides the spatial resolution required to resolve the immediate circumbinary environment. Indeed, many binaries where the main star is in the post-asymptotic giant branch (post-AGB) phase are surrounded by circumbinary disks. Those disks were first inferred from the infrared excess produced by dust. Snapshot interferometric observations in the infrared confirmed disk-like morphology and revealed high spatial complexity of the emission that the use of geometrical models could…
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