Resolving the Polarized Dust Emission of the Disk around the Massive Star Powering the HH 80–81 Radio Jet

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Published 2018 March 28 © 2018. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.
, , Citation J. M. Girart et al 2018 ApJL 856 L27 DOI 10.3847/2041-8213/aab76b

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2041-8205/856/2/L27

Abstract

Here we present deep (16 μJy beam−1), very high (40 mas) angular resolution 1.14 mm, polarimetric, Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) observations toward the massive protostar driving the HH 80–81 radio jet. The observations clearly resolve the disk oriented perpendicularly to the radio jet, with a radius of ≃0farcs171 (∼291 au at 1.7 kpc distance). The continuum brightness temperature, the intensity profile, and the polarization properties clearly indicate that the disk is optically thick for a radius of R ≲ 170 au. The linear polarization of the dust emission is detected almost all along the disk, and its properties suggest that dust polarization is produced mainly by self-scattering. However, the polarization pattern presents a clear differentiation between the inner (optically thick) part of the disk and the outer (optically thin) region of the disk, with a sharp transition that occurs at a radius of ∼0farcs1 (∼170 au). The polarization characteristics of the inner disk suggest that dust settling has not occurred yet with a maximum dust grain size between 50 and 500 μm. The outer part of the disk has a clear azimuthal pattern but with a significantly higher polarization fraction compared to the inner disk. This pattern is broadly consistent with the self-scattering of a radiation field that is beamed radially outward, as expected in the optically thin outer region, although contribution from non-spherical grains aligned with respect to the radiative flux cannot be excluded.

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1. Introduction

HH 80–81 is a spectacular, 14 pc long and highly collimated radio jet powered by a massive (early B-type) protostar (D ≃ 1.7 kpc; Rodriguez et al. 1980; Marti et al. 1993, 1995; Masqué et al. 2013, 2015; Vig et al. 2018). The protostellar radio jet is the first one for which linearly polarized synchrotron emission due to relativistic electrons has been detected, indicating the presence of a magnetic field aligned with the jet (Carrasco-González et al. 2010; Rodríguez-Kamenetzky et al. 2017). This is highly indicative that the jet is being launched from an accretion disk, as has been observed in other astrophysical environments (e.g., microquasars and active galactic nuclei (AGNs)). Previous pre-Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) sub-arcsecond angular resolution observations reveal the presence of a ∼1000 au rotating molecular flattened structure perpendicular to the radio jet (Gómez et al. 2003; Fernández-López et al. 2011b; Carrasco-González et al. 2012; Girart et al. 2017) and compact, barely resolved dust emission from the putative disk (Fernández-López et al. 2011a; Carrasco-González et al. 2012; Girart et al. 2017). The dynamical mass (star and disk) derived from these observations is roughly 10–20 M (e.g., Girart et al. 2017). These observations put an upper limit of ≃0.8% on the dust linear polarization at circumstellar scales. However, the dust polarization is detected at much larger scales (∼0.1 pc, Curran & Chrysostomou 2007).

Circumstellar disk polarization studies at (sub)mm wavelengths have developed substantially since the early, pre-ALMA, interferometric observations (Rao et al. 2014; Stephens et al. 2014; Cox et al. 2015; Segura-Cox et al. 2015; Fernández-López et al. 2016). Now ALMA is revealing in great detail the rich and complex polarization information hidden in the dust particles at circumstellar disk scales, where grain growth, dust settling, and optical depth effects may have a significant impact on the observed polarization properties (e.g., Hull et al. 2017a, 2017b; Stephens et al. 2017; Cox et al. 2018; Lee et al. 2018; Maury et al. 2018). This is leading to new challenges on how we understand the production of (sub)mm polarization from a theoretical perspective. Indeed, three main mechanisms are used currently to explain the dust polarization disk at (sub)mm wavelengths: self-scattering by dust grains (Kataoka et al. 2015, 2016; Yang et al. 2016a, 2017), alignment of aspherical dust grains with the magnetic field (Hoang & Lazarian 2008; Lazarian & Hoang 2008), and alignment with anisotropic radiation (Lazarian & Hoang 2007; Zeng et al. 2013; Tazaki et al. 2017). However, the dust polarization in disks could arise from a combination of these mechanisms (Yang et al. 2016b; Kataoka et al. 2017), which makes interpretation difficult.

Here we present 1.14 mm polarimetric ALMA observations of the accretion disk of the massive protostar GGD27 MM1 powering the HH 80–81 jet (Section 2). The disk has been fully resolved using a beam of ∼40 mas (Section 3). Continuum polarization observations are presented as well, showing in detail the complex morphology of the polarized emission (Section 3). We discuss the implication of these findings in Section 4.

2. Observations

The 1.14 mm (263.0 GHz) ALMA continuum polarimetric observations were taken on 2015 December 3. We used the Band 6 receiver with the correlator set in continuum mode (time division mode (TDM)) covering the 253.0–257.0 GHz and 269.0–273.0 GHz frequency ranges. The observations were performed with 37 antennas in the C36-7 configuration, which provided baselines between 15 m and 6.3 km (or 13 to 5400 kλ). The observations were performed under very good weather conditions, which yielded system temperatures between 80 and 100 K at 263 GHz. The standard aperture synthesis calibration and the specific polarization calibration were performed by the ALMA staff (see Nagai et al. 2016). The ALMA flux accuracy in Band 6 is ∼10%, as determined by the observatory flux monitoring program.

The observations have a very good coverage in the visibility plane except in the 150 and 300 kλ ranges, where there is a significant lack of visibilities. This means that the image fidelity is severely affected for scales larger than ≳0farcs7. Because of this, iterative phase-only self-calibration was performed using the Stokes I image as a model for visibilities with baselines larger than 300 kλ. The self-calibration solutions were transferred to the Stokes Q and U visibilities. The self-calibration allowed for the improvement of rms noise in the Stokes map (by a factor of ∼2 for the Stokes I).

In this Letter we present the polarization maps toward GGD27 MM1, all obtained with the CASA task clean. The Stokes I, Q, and U maps were generated with a value of 0.5 for the robust Briggs weighting parameter, and only used visibilities with baselines larger than 300 kλ. The resulting synthesized beam has an FWHM of 45.0 mas × 38.3 mas with a position angle of −62fdg4. The Stokes I rms noise is 19 μJy beam−1. The rms noise level in the Stokes Q and U dust maps is σpol = 16  μJy beam−1. The linear polarization maps were obtained from the Stokes Q and U images ($P=\sqrt{{Q}^{2}+{U}^{2}-{\sigma }_{\mathrm{pol}}^{2}}$). The polarization position angles (${\mathrm{PA}}_{\mathrm{pol}}=0.5\arctan (U/Q)$) were obtained using a cutoff of 3-σ, where σ is the rms noise of the Stokes Q and U maps.

3. Results

3.1. Dust Emission

The 1.14 mm continuum dust emission of GGD27 MM1 appears clearly resolved in an elliptical shape of ∼0farcs× 0farcs2 elongated along the northwest–southeast direction, perpendicular to the radio jet (Figure 1). The source radius, ∼300 au, suggests that the emission is tracing the expected putative disk around the massive protostar that powers the HH 80–81 jet. The peak intensity is 65.9 mJy beam−1, which implies a signal-to-noise ratio of ∼3500. The brightness temperature at the peak for the achieved angular resolution is 676 K.

Figure 1.

Figure 1. Image of the GGD27 MM1 disk in units of brightness temperature. (a) Original map; (b) map obtained after subtracting the compact source from the visibilities. The color scale is the same for the two panels. The black contours are 5, 10, 20, 50, 100, and 200 K, and the white contours 400 and 600 K. The synthesized beam is shown in the right-bottom corner of the bottom panel.

Standard image High-resolution image

We found that in the maps obtained using only baselines larger than ≳4000 kλ, the emission appears to arise from an unresolved, unpolarized source. This means that the source size is much smaller than the synthesized beam and that it has a very high brightness temperature, ≫750 K. The origin of this emission, probably ionized gas associated with the base of the jet, will be analyzed in a forthcoming publication (N. Añez-López et al. 2018, in preparation). Therefore, the compact source was removed from the visibilities and the maps were recreated with the same parameters (hereafter, we use maps without the compact source). Figure 1 shows the disk before and after the removal. The overall shape of the disk remains the same, but the peak brightness temperature decreases from 676 to 467 K.

Since the disk is very well resolved, a Gaussian cannot reproduce the intensity 2D profile. Alternatively, we assumed that the disk intensity can be modeled with two different power laws (${I}_{\nu }\propto {r}^{-q}$),16 one for the inner region (with a power law index ${q}_{\mathrm{inn}}$) and the other for the outer region (${q}_{\mathrm{out}}$). We define three radii: ${R}_{\mathrm{inn}}$ is the minimum radius where the dust emission is detected, Rturn is the radius where the power-law changes, and Rdisk is the disk radius. As free parameters we also included the disk position angle (PA) and the angle between the disk normal and the line-of-sight, i. The disk model was convolved with a Gaussian with the same FWHM as the synthesized beam. The best fit was obtained for a disk with a radius of 171 ± 6 mas (291 ± 10 au), PA = 112fdg9 ± 1fdg0, i = 48fdg8 ±0fdg5 and a total 1.14 mm flux density of 350 ± 1 mJy (see Figure 2). The inner and transition radius are Rinn = 7 ± 1 mas (12 ± 2 au) and Rturn = 92 ± 1 mas (156 au), respectively. In addition, the power-law index changes dramatically in the disk, from a steep index in the outer part (qout = 4.5 ± 0.1) to a relatively flat index in the inner disk (qinn = 0.7 ± 0.1). Previous 7 mm observations marginally resolved the dust emission associated with this disk, but the derived radius, ∼200 au, had a large uncertainty due to the lack of sensitivity and to the contamination from the radio jet emission (Carrasco-González et al. 2012). The 1.14 and 7 mm flux densities indicate a spectral index of 2.2, which implies that the disk dust emission is nearly optically thick.

Figure 2.

Figure 2. Radial profile of the 1.14 mm dust emission from the GGD27 MM1 disk, obtained by averaging the emission over elliptical rings (filled squares). The blue and dashed line show the best-fitted profile (see Section 3.1) and the beam profile, respectively. The error bars show the rms dispersion within each ring for the data. The vertical dotted line indicates Rturn, the radius where the power law changes.

Standard image High-resolution image

3.2. Dust Polarization

The dust linear polarization is detected almost all along the GGD27 MM1 disk (Figure 3). The polarized peak intensity, 0.28 mJy beam−1 (≃0.67% of the Stokes I peak intensity), is offset 45 mas southwest of the Stokes I intensity peak. Remarkably, the polarization properties show two clear distinct regions in the disk with a sharp transition between them, which coincides with a location of zero-level polarization. This occurs at the Stokes I iso-intensity contour level of 11.8 mJy beam−1, or, equivalently, at a dust brightness temperature of 120 K. Interestingly, this transition is located at a disk radius of R ≃ 0farcs10, which is precisely the transition radius, Rturn, where the power law of the Stokes I intensity profile changes (see previous section).

Figure 3.

Figure 3. Top panel: composite of the 1.14 mm continuum ALMA Stokes I (contours), polarized intensity (grayscale), and polarization position angle segments (red bars) in the GGD27 MM1 disk. Bottom panel: similar as before, but the color image showing the polarization fraction (here, the polarization position angle segments appear as black bars). In both panels, the contour levels are 3, 10, 50, 120, 200, and 400 K. The wedge shows the scale of the polarized intensity and polarization fraction. The synthesized beam is shown in the bottom-right corner of the panels. Note that the 120 K contour appears at the transition radius, with an almost null polarization ring, between two distinctive polarization patterns.

Standard image High-resolution image

The region inside the transition radius, Rturn, (hereafter the inner disk) has a very low polarization level region. Thus, within this radius the polarization degree has a mean value of 0.56% and a standard deviation of 0.33%. In the left panel of Figure 4, the histogram of the polarization position angles shows two main directions. Most of the angles are partially aligned with the minor axis (22fdg6), with an average direction of ∼36°. The other region arises from the northeast quadrant of the inner disk, and shows an average position angle of −38°.

Figure 4.

Figure 4. Left panel: histogram of the distribution of the polarization position angles for the disk's inner region (R < 0farcs10). The dashed line indicates the position angle of the disk minor axis. Right panel: histogram of the differences between the polarization position angles and the disk azimuthal angles for the disk's outer region (R > 0farcs10).

Standard image High-resolution image

The outer disk (i.e., the region outside Rturn) has significantly higher polarization levels than the inner disk, with an average value of 4.0% and a standard deviation of 2.3%.17 The polarization position angles have a nearly azimuthal pattern (i.e., they follow a direction tangent to the iso-intensity contours of the Stokes I emission). At the position of each polarization position angle segment shown in Figure 3, we have computed the expected tangent angle for an ellipse centered in the disk center that crosses this point. The right panel of Figure 4 shows the histogram of the difference between this tangent angle and the observed polarization angle. The average angle difference, 11°, is relatively small. This confirms the azimuthal pattern in the outer disk.

4. Discussion

4.1. The Optically Thick Disk around the Massive Protostar Powering the HH 80–81 Jet

The brightness temperature of the disk dust emission reaches high values, up to ∼400 K, but it drops well below 10 K in the outskirts of the disk. This suggests that the inner part of the disk is optically thick and that the dust optical depth decreases with radius, becoming optically thin. A multi-line analysis of SO2, at scales of a few hundred au, indicates that the average kinetic temperature of the traced molecular gas is ∼120 K (Fernández-López et al. 2011b). Thus, we can roughly use this temperature as a proxy to define where the dust emission becomes optically thick, i.e., where the dust brightness temperature reaches a value similar to the gas temperature (assuming that gas and dust are well coupled). The dust brightness temperature reaches this value at the Rturn radius, i.e., at the radius where the Stokes intensity profile changes significantly in its slope, so it becomes much flatter in the inner disk with respect to the outer disk. In addition, this is the radius where there is a sharp transition between the polarization properties. Together, all of this evidence strongly suggests that the Rturn radius (0farcs1 or 170 au) indicates the change between the optically thick and the optically thin regimes in the disk. This implies that observations at 1.14 mm or at shorter wavelength cannot be used to properly study the disk density and temperature as well as the kinematics in the inner disk. Observations at longer wavelengths may alleviate this problem to a certain extent.

4.2. Origin of the Dust Polarization

Because of the clearly different polarization properties of the inner and outer regions of the disk, here we discuss separately the properties of the two regions.

Initial observation suggests that the overall polarization pattern of the inner disk matches well the prediction of self-scattering from an optically thick disk where dust settling (into the mid-plane) has not yet occurred (Yang et al. 2017). First, the clearest sign of the optically thick case is that the strongest polarization signal is offset along the minor axis with respect to the total intensity peak. In addition, the strongest polarized emission is extended along the major axis with a curved shape, similar to what is expected (see Figure 4(h) from Yang et al. 2017). Furthermore, the outflow geometry (e.g., Heathcote et al. 1998) indicates that this region appears in the nearest side of the disk (with respect to the observer), which is also a strong prediction by the aforementioned model. Another strong indication of self-scattering in an optically thick disk is the bifurcation in the polarization orientation, with respect to the minor axis direction, along the major axis. Thus, in an optically thin disk the orientation is basically uniform and parallel to the minor axis. In the optically thick case, where only the surface layer of a (dust) disk of an appreciable geometric thickness is directly observable, the polarization orientation is predicted to deviate significantly from that of the minor axis in a well-defined manner. The observed position angles in the inner disk show a reasonable agreement with this predicted pattern, except on its northeast side (see Section 3.2). This can be better observed by making slices along the major axis and along a parallel line to the major axis in the near and far sides of the disk (see Figure 5). For the case of an optically thick disk, polarization angles in cuts parallel to the major axis are expected to be symmetrical with respect to the origin (defined as the peak position relative to the minor axis), as is shown in the bottom panel of Figure 5. This behavior is partially observed in the data. In spite of being slightly offset, the slice in the near side of the disk is the one that matches better the expected shape. The other two slices show that the position angles in the eastern side deviate significantly, by 30°–50°, with respect to the expected values. One possibility for this significant departure from the predicted scattering pattern is that the (dust) disk surface is highly perturbed, potentially by a disk-wind or some other means. Another possibility is that they are modified by polarized emission from, e.g., magnetically aligned grains in the envelope surrounding the disk.

Figure 5.

Figure 5. Top: difference between the position angles of the dust polarization and the disk's minor axis angle for three cuts parallel to the major axis (PA = 113°)---one along the major axis itself (black line), a cut 40 mas (68 au) north of the major axis (in the far side of the disk, green line), and a cut 40 mas south of the major axis (in the near side of the disk, red line). Positive values of the position offset indicates position west of the disk intensity peak. Bottom: similar but from the optically thick disk model by Yang et al. (2017).

Standard image High-resolution image

The average polarization fraction detected in the inner region, 0.56%, is well within the expected values for self-scattering, but it is lower than the predicted average maximum values (Kataoka et al. 2016; Yang et al. 2017). A rough estimate of the maximum grain size in the GGD27 MM1 disk can be obtained from the studies carried out by Kataoka et al. (2016, and references therein). From Figure 3 of Kataoka et al. (2016) and from taking into account the average polarization fraction in GGD27 MM1, we estimate that the maximum grain size should be in the 50 and 500 μm range.

In the outer part of the disk, the azimuthal pattern is remarkable (Figures 3 and 4(b)). This is expected for the outer layers of the disk, where the radially anisotropic radiation is basically dominated by the radiation from the inner part of the disk. In models of optically thin disks around low-mass stars, this layer is typically very thin, ∼2%–3%, with a polarization degree higher than in the center (Kataoka et al. 2016; Yang et al. 2017). The GGD27 MM1 disk presents three clear differences with respect to these published predictions. First, the azimuthal layer is significantly broader and appears to extend outward starting from the transition radius between optically thick and thin regions. Second, the polarization fraction in many zones reaches values of 5%–7%, which appears to be higher than the predicted values. Third, the polarization fraction in the outer part of the disk is apparently larger along the minor axis than along the major axis. It is possible that these discrepancies with the existing scattering models (that are not tailored for our particular source) can be resolved with an outer disk where the temperature drops more quickly with radius than is assumed in the existing models. We have carried out some preliminary models that confirm this hypothesis (a more detailed study is out of the scope of this paper and will be part of a future work). It is also plausible that the polarization in the outer disk is due to non-spherical grains aligned by anisotropic radiation (Tazaki et al. 2017).

Finally, this work has shown the unique case of a fully linearly polarized disk around a massive protostar. Observations at multiple wavelengths but with similar angular resolution are needed to better constrain the polarization origin in the outer disk, the maximum grain size in the inner and outer disk, and to determine the origin of the southeast–northwest asymmetry in the inner disk.

This paper makes use of the following ALMA data: ADS/JAO.ALMA#2015.1.00480.S. ALMA is a partnership of ESO (representing its member states), NSF (USA) and NINS (Japan), together with NRC (Canada) and NSC and ASIAA (Taiwan) and KASI (Republic of Korea), in cooperation with the Republic of Chile. The Joint ALMA Observatory is operated by ESO, AUI/NRAO and NAOJ. J.M.G., R.E., G.A., N.A.L., G.B., J.F.G., M.O., and J.M.T. are supported by the MINECO (Spain) AYA2014-57369-C3 and AYA2017-84390-C2 coordinated grants. S.C. acknowledges support from DGAPA, UNAM, and CONACyT, México. H.Y. is supported in part by ALMA SOS, and Z.L.Y. by NASA NNX14AB38G and NSF AST-1313083 and 1715259. M.P. acknowledges funding from the European Unions Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Skłodowska-Curie grant agreement No. 664931. I.J.S. acknowledges financial support from STFC through an Ernest Rutherford Fellowship (ST/L004801). J.M. acknowledges support from MINECO (Spain) AYA2016-76012-C3-3-P grant.

Facility: ALMA - Atacama Large Millimeter Array.

Software: CASA (McMullin et al. 2007).

Footnotes

  • 16 

    A fit using a simple power law generates a significantly worse solution.

  • 17 

    This has been measured in a region enclosed between Rturn and the disk radius of Rdisk.

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10.3847/2041-8213/aab76b