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The asymptotic giant branch (AGB) star HR3126, associated with the arcminute-scale bipolar Toby Jug Nebula, provides a rare opportunity to study the emergence of bipolar structures at the end of the AGB phase. We carried out long-baseline interferometric observations with AMBER and GRAVITY (2--2.45 micron) at the Very Large Telescope Interferometer, speckle interferometric observations with VLT/NACO (2.24 micron), and imaging with SPHERE-ZIMPOL (0.55 micron) and VISIR (7.9--19.5 micron). The images reconstructed in the continuum at 2.1--2.29 micron from the AMBER+GRAVITY data reveal the central star surrounded by an elliptical ring-like structure with a semimajor and semiminor axis of 5.3 and 3.5 mas, respectively. The ring is interpreted as the inner rim of an equatorial dust disk viewed from an inclination angle of ~50 degrees, and its axis is approximately aligned with the bipolar nebula. The disk is surprisingly compact, with an inner radius of a mere 3.5 Rstar (2 au). Our 2-D radiative transfer modeling shows that an optically thick flared disk with silicate grains as large as ~4 micron can reproduce the observed continuum images and the spectral energy distribution. The images obtained in the CO first overtone bands reveal elongated extended emission around the central star, suggesting the oblateness of the stars atmosphere or the presence of a CO gas disk inside the dust cavity. The object is unresolved with SPHERE-ZIMPOL, NACO, and VISIR. If the disk formed together with the bipolar nebula, the grain growth from sub-micron to a few microns should have taken place over the nebulas dynamical age of ~3900 yrs. The non-detection of a companion in the reconstructed images implies that either its 2.2 micron brightness is more than ~30 times lower than that of the red giant or it might have been shredded due to binary interaction.
Context: Post-Asymptotic Giant Branch (AGB) binaries are surrounded by stable dusty and gaseous disks similar to the ones around young stellar objects. Whereas significant effort is spent on modeling observations of disks around young stellar objects
V1280 Sco is one of the slowest dust-forming nova ever historically observed. We performed multi-epoch high-spatial resolution observations of the circumstellar dusty environment of V1280 Sco to investigate the level of asymmetry of the ejecta We obs
The mechanism of mass loss in late evolutionary stages of low- and intermediate-mass stars is not yet well understood. Therefore, it is crucial to study the dynamics of the region within a few stellar radii, where the wind acceleration is considered
The Herbig Ae/Be star LkHalpha 101 has been imaged at high angular resolution at a number of wavelengths in the near-infrared (from 1 to 3 microns) using the Keck 1 Telescope, and also observed in the mid-infrared (11.15 microns) using the U.C. Berke
We have imaged the bipolar planetary nebula M2-9 using SOFIAs FORCAST instrument in six wavelength bands between 6.6 and 37.1 $mu m$. A bright central point source, unresolved with SOFIAs $sim$ 4${}$-to-5${}$ beam, is seen at each wavelength, and the