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Published December 10, 1996 | Published
Journal Article Open

Hubble space telescope observations of the disk and jet of HH 30

Abstract

HH 30 in Taurus has been imaged with the Hubble Space Telescope WFPC2. The images show in reflected light a flared disk with a radius of about 250 AU that obscures the protostar. The disk resembles detailed accretion disk models that constrain its density distribution and show that its inclination is less than 10 degrees. There are bipolar emission-line jets perpendicular to the disk, a very clear demonstration of the standard paradigm for accretion disk and jet systems. However, asymmetries in the light distribution show that the disk has not completely settled into a quasi-equilibrium accretion state, or that some of the observed scattering is from an asymmetric envelope. The emission-line jet itself is resolved into a number of knots with typical lengths and separations of 0".4, much smaller and more numerous than indicated by lower resolution ground-based studies. There are indications of still finer structures in the jet all the way to the resolution limit of 0".1. The knots have proper motions ranging from 100 to 300 km s^(-1) and are therefore generated at the surprisingly high rate of about 0.4 knots per jet per year. The jet appears to be collimated within a cone of opening angle 3º and can be seen to within 30 AU of the star. Both single- and multiple-scattering disk models have a range of possible solutions, but by requiring pressure support and temperature equilibrium, a self-consistent model emerges. There is evidence for pressure support because the disk appears to have a Gaussian height profile. The temperature at each point in the disk is determined by the disk geometry, which in turn fixes the temperature in a self-consistent manner. The extinction to the protostar is unknown but constrained to be greater than 24 mag. The optical properties of the scattering grains in the disk are determined and found to imply a large scattering asymmetry, but they seem to follow the interstellar reddening law. The absolute magnitude and colors of the unseen protostar, which has a brightness in the I bandpass of about 0.16 times solar and is very red, are obtained. The disk mass is about 0.006 times solar and has an expected lifetime of about 10^5 yr.

Additional Information

© 1996 American Astronomical Society. Received 1996 April 25; accepted 1996 June 26. This work was conducted partially at the Space Telescope Science Institute, operated by AURA, and at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, under contracts with the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. K. R. S. acknowledges support from the Origins of Solar Systems Research Program, Code SL, NASA Headquarters. We would like to thank Steve Beckwith, Doug Lin, John Mathis, Lynn Matthews, Reinhard Mundt, Nino Panagia, Jim Pringle, and an anonymous referee for valuable discussions and suggestions.

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