HD 50138 is one of the brightest B[e] stars and is located at a distance of ∼380 pc with strong infrared excess. The star was observed in [O i ] 63 μ m and [C ii ] 158 μ m with high velocity resolution with upGREAT on SOFIA. The velocity-resolved [O i ] emission provides evidence for a large gas disk, ∼760 au in size, around HD 50138. Whereas previous interferometric observations gave strong evidence for a hot gas and dust disk in Keplerian rotation, our observations are the first to provide unambiguous evidence for a large warm disk around the star. Herschel /PACS observations showed that the [C ii ] emission is extended, therefore the [C ii ] emission most likely originates from an ionized gas shell created by a past outflow event. We confirm the isolated nature of HD 50138. It is far from any star-forming region and has low proper motion. Neither is there any sign of a remnant cloud from which it could have formed. The extended disk around the star appears to be carbon-poor. It shows OH and [O i ] emission, but no CO. The CO abundance appears to be at least an order of magnitude lower than that of OH. Furthermore, 13 CO is enriched by more than a factor of five, confirming that the star is not a Herbig Be star. Finally, we note that our high-spectral-resolution [O i ] and [C ii ] observations provide a very accurate heliocentric velocity of the star, 40.8 ± 0.2 km s −1 .
CITATION STYLE
Sandell, G., Salyk, C., Ancker, M. van den, Wit, W.-J. de, Chambers, E., Güsten, R., … Richter, H. (2018). Velocity-resolved [O i] 63 μm Emission in the HD 50138 Circumstellar Disk*. The Astrophysical Journal, 864(2), 104. https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/aad639
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