Structure of the Source I disk in Orion-KL
Melvyn Wright, John Baly, Tomoya Hirota, Kyle Miller, Tyler Harding,, Keira Colleluori, Adam Ginsburg, Ciriaco Goddi, and Brett A. McGuire

TL;DR
This study uses multi-frequency imaging to analyze the structure and dynamics of the Source I disk in Orion-KL, revealing a warped, evolving disk with signs of episodic accretion and outflows, suggesting possible binarity.
Contribution
It provides high-resolution, multi-frequency observations of the Source I disk, unveiling its warped structure, internal features, and evidence of episodic accretion and outflow activity.
Findings
Disk is almost edge-on with ~100 AU diameter
Warped ridge of emission suggests dynamic, evolving structure
Evidence of episodic accretion and outflows from the disk
Abstract
This paper analyses images from 43 to 340 GHz to trace the structure of the Source I disk in Orion-KL with 12 AU resolution. The data reveal an almost edge-on disk with an outside diameter 100 AU which is heated from the inside. The high opacity at 220-340 GHz hides the internal structure and presents a surface temperature 500 K. Images at 43, 86 and 99 GHz reveal structure within the disk. At 43 GHz there is bright compact emission with brightness temperature 1300 K. Another feature, most prominent at 99 GHz, is a warped ridge of emission. The data can be explained by a simple model with a hot inner structure, seen through cooler material. A wide angle outflow mapped in SiO emission ablates material from the interior of the disk, and extends in a bipolar outflow over 1000 AU along the rotation axis of the disk. SiO emission appears to have a…
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