AAS 197, January 2001
Session 52. Science with Adaptive Optics
Display, Tuesday, January 9, 2001, 9:30am-7:00pm, Exhibit Hall

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[52.10] HST and Adaptive Optics Imaging of the Edge-on Circumtertiary Disk in the Young Triple System HV Tauri

K.R. Stapelfeldt (JPL / Caltech), F. Menard (CFHT), W. Brandner (U. of Hawaii), D.L. Padgett (SIRTF Science Center, Caltech), J.E. Krist (STScI), A.M. Watson (UNAM Morelia)

Hubble Space Telescope images of the HV Tauri triple system show that HV Tau C appears as a compact bipolar nebula at visual wavelengths. Near-infrared adaptive optics observations made at the Canada France Hawaii Telescope show a similar morphology, and no directly visible star at wavelengths less than 2 microns. These results confirm the conclusions of Monin & Bouvier 2000, namely that HV Tau C is an optically thick circumstellar disk seen close to edge-on. The images are compared to scattered light models for circumstellar disks. We find that the HV Tau C disk has an outer radius of 85 AU, inclination of about 6 deg, gaussian scale height of 15 AU at its outer radius, and is flared. The thickness of the dark lane indicates a total disk mass about half that of Jupiter. There is clear evidence for declining dust opacity toward longer wavelengths, as the dust lane thickness shrinks by 30 between 0.8 and 2.2 microns; the trend is consistent with interstellar dust grains. Tidal truncation of the disk outer radius may have occurred in this system.


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