Probing the close environment of young stellar objects with interferometry
Astrophysics, abstract
astro-ph/0303260
From: Fabien Malbet <Fabien.Malbet@obs.ujf-grenoble.fr> [via CCSD proxy]
Date: Wed, 12 Mar 2003 15:34:33 GMT (88kb)
Probing the close environment of young stellar objects with
interferometry
Authors:
Fabien Malbet
Comments: Review to be published in JENAM’2002 proceedings “The Very Large
Telescope Interferometer Challenges for the future”
The study of Young Stellar Objects (YSOs) is one of the most exciting topics
that can be undertaken by long baseline optical interferometry. The magnitudes
of these objects are at the edge of capabilities of current optical
interferometers, limiting the studies to a few dozen, but are well within the
capability of coming large aperture interferometers like the VLT
Interferometer, the Keck Interferometer, the Large Binocular Telescope or
‘OHANA. The milli-arcsecond spatial resolution reached by interferometry probes
the very close environment of young stars, down to a tenth of an astronomical
unit. In this paper, I review the different aspects of star formation that can
be tackled by interferometry: circumstellar disks, multiplicity, jets. I
present recent observations performed with operational infrared
interferometers, IOTA, PTI and ISI, and I show why in the next future one will
extend these studies with large aperture interferometers.
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