High-resolution Near-infrared Spectroscopy of IRAS 16316-1540: Evidence of Accretion Burst

  • Yoon, Sung-Yong (School of Space Research, Kyung Hee University) ;
  • Lee, Jeong-Eun (School of Space Research, Kyung Hee University) ;
  • Park, Sunkyung (School of Space Research, Kyung Hee University) ;
  • Lee, Seokho (School of Space Research, Kyung Hee University) ;
  • Herczeg, Gregory J. (Kavli Institute for Astronomy and Astrophysics, Peking University China) ;
  • Mace, Gregory (Department of Astronomy, University of Texas at Austin) ;
  • Lee, Jae-Joon (Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute)
  • Published : 2019.04.10

Abstract

The high-resolution near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopy can reveal the evidence of the accretion burst (e.g., the broadened absorption features produced by the Keplerian disk motion) although the moment of the outburst was not caught. The embedded protostar IRAS 16316-1540 observed with the Immersion Grating Infrared Spectrograph (IGRINS, $R={\Delta}{\lambda}/{\lambda}{\sim}45000$) shows the broad absorption features in atomic and CO transitions, as seen in FU Orionis objects (FUors), indicative of an outburst event. We examine whether the spectra of IRAS 16316-1540 arise from the rotating inner hot gaseous disk. Using the IGRINS spectral library, we show that the line profiles of IRAS 16316-1540 are more consistent with an M1.5 V template spectrum convolved with a disk rotation profile than the protostellar photosphere absorption features with a high stellar rotation velocity. We also note that the absorption features deviated from the expected line profile of the accretion disk model can be explained by a turbulence motion generated in the disk atmosphere. From previous observations that show the complex environment and the misaligned outflow axes in IRAS 16316-1540, we suggest that an impact of infalling clumpy envelope material against the disk induces the disk precession, causing the accretion burst from the inner disk to the protostar.

Keywords