GeminiFocus July 2013 | Page 12

massive than about 25 times the Sun’s mass and thus not massive enough to be stripped Wolf-Rayet stars. These authors instead suggest a history of mass loss through evolution in a binary system. Thus, binary environments appear to be important for some core-collapse supernovae. Figure 2. Model of the environment of V1247 Orionis includes a hot optically thick inner disk, a cool optically thick outer disk, and optically thin dust in the gap between them. For the study, the team used the integral field unit of the Gemini Multi-Object Spectrograph (GMOS) on Gemini North as part of Subaru exchange time, along with the SuperNova Integral Field Spectrograph at the University of Hawai‘i 88-inch telescope, also on Mauna Kea. They targeted nearby galaxies, where 1 arcsecond typically corresponds to 230 light-years (70 parsecs), to distinguish the progenitor star clusters. The data show that other nearby clusters display a somewhat different history and metallicity from the supernova site (Figure 1). These results are published in The Astrophysical Journal, and in a separate paper (pending), the team applies identical techniques to the host environments of Type II supernovae. ferometric analysis techniques, to determine the disk orientation and geometry. Considering longer-baseline MIR interferometry in addition, a compact disk is evident, extending over 0.2 AU. The inferred structure (Figure 2), based on the full set of observations, shows a hot inner disk, a cool outer disk, and optically thin carbon-rich dust in the gap between them. The emission in the gap region appears to be asymmetric, and the dependence on observed wavelength implies that this is due to density inhomogeneities, rather than the presence of a single body like a planet. Resolving a Stellar Disk at Earth-Sun Distance Scales Planets in the disks around young stars may carve gaps or dynamically affect their environment. These so-called transitional and pre-transitional disks are therefore interesting as important stages in the development of planets. An international team led by Stefan Kraus (Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics) used multiple telescopes, including Gemini South, to resolve the disk around V1247 Orionis on physical scales of astronomical units (AU; the average EarthSun distance), finding asymmetries and unambiguous evidence for a gap in the disk. The observations included an uncommon use of Gemini’s Thermal Region Camera Spectrograph (T-ReCS) for mid-infrared (MIR) imaging, using short exposures and inter- 12 GeminiFocus The persistence of the hot inner disk, with material located at the dust sublimation radius (corresponding to the hottest temperature where it can survive), rules out some proposed methods of clearing gaps in similar planetary disks, including photoevaporation, instabilities, and grain growth. Instead, the authors conclude that dynamical clearing of the gap, due to developing planetary or other companions, is the most likely origin. Other well-studied transitional and pre-transitional disks do not show evidence for such optically thin material close to the star, which suggests that V1247 Orionis may show us an earlier stage of development. The complete results are published in The Astrophysical Journal. July2013