4.7 Article

IMAGING THE DISK AND JET OF THE CLASSICAL T TAURI STAR AA TAU

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 762, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/762/1/40

Keywords

circumstellar matter; instrumentation: high angular resolution; planetary systems; polarization; protoplanetary disks; stars: individual (AA Tau)

Funding

  1. Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy, Inc., under NASA [NAS 5-26555]
  2. NASA RTOP [399131.02.02.02.32, 399131.02.05.02.34]
  3. NASA [NNH06CC28C, NNX09AC73G]
  4. [HST-GO-9136]
  5. NASA [NNX09AC73G, 120162] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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Previous studies of the classical T Tauri star AA Tau have interpreted the UX-Orionis-like photo-polarimetric variability as being due to a warp in the inner disk caused by an inclined stellar magnetic dipole field. We test that these effects are macroscopically observable in the inclination and alignment of the disk. We use Hubble Space Telescope (HST)/STIS coronagraphic imagery to measure the V magnitude of the star for both STIS coronagraphic observations, compare these data with optical photometry in the literature, and find that, unlike other classical T Tauri stars observed in the same HST program, the disk is most robustly detected in scattered light at stellar optical minimum light. We measure the outer disk radius, 1 ''.15 +/- 0 ''.0, major-axis position angle, and disk inclination and find that the inner disk, as reported in the literature, is both misinclined and misaligned with respect to the outer disk. AA Tau drives a faint jet, detected in both STIS observations and in follow-on Goddard Fabry-Perot imagery, which is also misaligned with respect to the projection of the outer disk minor axis and is poorly collimated near the star, but which can be traced 21 '' from the star in data from 2005. The measured outer disk inclination, 71 degrees +/- 1 degrees, is out of the range of inclinations suggested for stars with UX-Orionis-like variability when no grain growth has occurred in the disk. The faintness of the disk, small disk size, and detection of the star despite the high inclination all indicate that the dust disk must have experienced grain growth and settling toward the disk midplane, which we verify by comparing the observed disk with model imagery from the literature.

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