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MPIfR Optical & Infrared Interferometry Group


R. Osterbart, A. Men'shchikov, G. Weigelt, Y. Balega and N. Langer:

High-resolution Speckle Imaging and Radiative Transfer Modeling of the Red Rectangle

Astronomische Gesellschaft Meeting Abstracts (AGM 14, P31)
Poster presented at the Annual Scientific Meeting of the Astronomische Gesellschaft
at Heidelberg, September 14-19, 1998


Abstract. We present diffraction-limited optical and NIR images of the Red Rectangle reconstructed from ESO/MPG 2.2 m and SAO 6 m telescope data. The unprecedented resolution of 75 mas was achieved by applying the speckle masking bispectrum method to the data. The bipolar structure of the Red Rectangle is visible at all observed wavelengths. Two bright compact lobes are present in the center of the nebula with a separation of approximately 0.15". A dark dust lane totally obscures the central close binary. This structure and the X-shape of the nebula on larger scales are thought to be the result of a rather strong wind clearing the polar cavities.
Our 2D radiative transfer calculations show that the bipolar appearance is caused by a very dense, compact torus with an optical depth of A_V ~30 mag. From a comparison of the observed and theoretical images, we derived an inclination angle of 7 degrees for the torus. The model torus has a 1/r^2 dust density distribution between the inner boundary at 6 AU and R=16 AU (~50 mas), while at larger distances the density gradient steepens to approximately 1/r^4. We derived a lower limit for the total dust mass in the torus of 2x10^-3 Msol. The radiative transfer calculations show that the best agreement with all observational constraints can be found if the compact, massive torus contains predominantly very large (millimeter-sized) grains. A much smaller mass of normal (submicron-sized) grains must exist mainly in the bipolar outflow regions.

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Last modified on 06-Nov-98.
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