Abstract

The inner 100 AU of HD 100546 is studied via far-ultraviolet long-slit spectroscopy with the Hubble Space Telescope Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph (STIS). The star is surrounded by reflection nebulosity, which can be traced 100 AU in the continuum, and by emission from H I Lyα, N I, Si II, and fluorescent H2 transitions. The Lyα emission can be traced up to 200 AU along the system semimajor axis and 300 AU along the semiminor axis. The radial surface brightness profile and the presence of both reflection nebulosity and molecular gas suggest that we have detected the flared surface of the disk predicted from analysis of the IR spectral energy distribution. When corrected for the r-2 falloff in illumination from the Herbig Be star, the reflection nebulosity, neutral atomic gas, and H2 emission all reveal the presence of a central cavity extending 013 ± 0025 (13 AU) from the star, more than 20 times larger in radius than would be expected from dust sublimation alone. The reflection nebulosity within the cavity is centered on a location 005 (5 AU) to the southeast of the star along the system semimajor axis. The pericenter asymmetry in the cavity is inconsistent with cavity formation by the combined effects of ice sublimation, radiation pressure blowout on small grains, or other disk chemistry that should produce azimuthally symmetric features. The STIS data are also consistent with a current accretion rate onto the Herbig Be star no higher than a few times 10-9 M☉ yr-1, an order of magnitude lower than seen in 5-8 Myr old Herbig Ae stars. The low accretion rate, large cavity, pericenter asymmetry, and deficit of warm dust grain emission observed over 2-8 μm are all consistent with dynamical sculpting of the disk by one or more bodies within the disk. An upper limit to the flux from any chromospherically active, low-mass companion is a factor of 5-10 fainter than AU Mic (M1 Ve; t = 12 Myr) at the distance of HD 100546. This upper limit firmly excludes a low-mass stellar companion within the cavity but does not exclude a less active and/or luminous brown dwarf. The absence of similar central clearing in younger Herbig Ae stars suggests that any companion must become externally detectable late in the evolution of the disk, favoring a giant planet as the source of the structure in the HD 100546 disk.

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