Inner Disks Around Young Stars
A wealth of evidence has accumulated over the last decade or so proving
the existence of massive disks of dust and gas around some pre-main
sequence stars. However, the innermost regions of these disks, where
material accretes from the disk onto the star, remain poorly studied due
to the lack of high-angular resolution observations. Over the past several
years, I have been observing T Tauri and Herbig Ae/Be stars at milliarcsecond
resolution using the Palomar Testbed
Interferometer and the
Keck
Interferometer. Early results provided size scales and basic geometries
of dust within an AU of these young stars
(
Eisner et al. 2003 ;
2004;
2005;
2006;
2007).
We recently commissioned a grism with a resolving power of 240 at the
Keck Interferometer and used it to constrain gas, as well, as dust around
young stars
(Eisner 2007); this work was also described in
this article. We are currently working to
commission a grism with an order of magnitude higher dispersion for
further studies.
Josh Eisner; April 14, 2008