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Oliver ABSIL : Universite de Liege
A first insight on the Vega inner debris disk with the CHARA/FLUOR interferometer
Using the FLUOR near-infrared beam combiner installed at the CHARA
Array (Mt Wilson, CA), we have obtained high-precision interferometric
measurements of Vega, a prototypical debris-disk star known to be
surrounded by large amounts of cold dust at 80-100 AU in a ring-like
structure. The combination of short and long baselines has allowed us
to separately resolve the stellar photosphere and its immediate
neighbourhood inside by the FLUOR field-of-view of 1
(~8 AU at the distance of Vega). Our observations show a significant
deficit in visibility at short baselines with respect to the expected
visibility of a simple uniform disk stellar model, suggesting the
presence of an extended source of emission around Vega. We propose
that the visibility deficit is most likely due to the presence of hot
circumstellar dust in the inner part of the debris disk, with a flux
ratio of 1.29+/-0.19% between the integrated dust emission and the
stellar photosphere in K band (2.15 microns). Using this piece of
information together with archival photometric and interferometric
data in the near- and mid-infrared, we derive the expected physical
properties of the dust grains by modelling their infrared Spectral
Energy Distribution. Small, highly refractive grains are suspected to
be located at only a few 0.1 AU from Vega, with a total mass of about
1e-7 Earth mass. Their presence is thought to be an indicator of major
dynamical perturbations currently ongoing in the Vega system.
Last modified: Sun Jul 9 17:23:21 2006
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