20 research outputs found
Long term variability of B supergiant winds
The object of this observing proposal was to sample wind variability in B supergiants on a daily basis over a period of several days in order to determine the time scale with which density variability occurs in their winds. Three stars were selected for this project: 69 Cyg (B0 Ib), HD 164402 (B0 Ib), and HD 47240 (B1 Ib). Three grey scale representations of the Si IV lambda lambda 1400 doublet in each star are attached. In these figures, time (in days) increases upward, and the wavelength (in terms of velocity relative to the rest wavelength of the violet component of the doublet) is the abscissa. The spectra are normalized by a minimum absorption (maximum flux) template, so that all changes appear as absorptions. As a result of these observations, we can now state with some certainty that typical B supergiants develop significant wind inhomogeneities with recurrence times of a few days, and that some of these events show signs of strong temporal coherence
X-ray observations of rapidly rotating O stars
HEAO-2 results suggest that high vsini O stars appear to be significantly fainter x-ray sources. We proposed to observe additional high vsini O stars to test this hypothesis. Unfortunately, the PSPC was shot down during our scheduled observation time, and the observation was not re-scheduled. The contract work was modified to carry out other related x-ray tasks
An analysis of the shapes of interstellar extinction curves : VIII : the optical extinction structure
New Hubble Space Telescope/STIS optical spectra were obtained for a sample of early-type stars with existing International Ultraviolet Explorer UV spectra. These data were used to construct optical extinction curves whose general properties are discussed elsewhere. In this paper, we identify extinction features in the curves that are wider than diffuse interstellar bands (DIBs) but narrower than the well known broadband variability. This intermediate scale structure, or ISS, contains distinct features whose peaks can contribute a few percent to 20% of the total extinction. Most of the ISS variation can be captured by three principal components. We model the ISS with three Drude profiles and show that their strengths and widths vary from one sight line to another, but their central positions are stable, near 4370, 4870, and 6300 A. The very broad structure (VBS) in optical curves appears to be a minimum between the 4870 and 6300 A absorption peaks. We find relations among the fit parameters and provide a physical interpretation of them in terms of a simplistic grain model. Finally, we note that the strengths of the 4370 and 4870 A features are correlated to the strength of the 2175 A UV bump, but that the 6300 A feature is not, and that none of the ISS features are related to R(V). However, we verify that the broadband curvature of the continuous optical extinction is strongly related to R(V)
An analysis of the shapes of interstellar extinction curves. VII Milky Way spectrophotometric optical-through-ultraviolet extinction and its R-dependence
We produce a set of 72 NIR-through-UV extinction curves by combining new Hubble Space Telescope/STIS optical spectrophotometry with existing International Ultraviolet Explorer spectrophotometry (yielding gapless coverage from 1150 to 10000 ?) and NIR photometry. These curves are used to determine a new, internally consistent NIR-through-UV Milky Way mean curve and to characterize how the shapes of the extinction curves depend on R(V). We emphasize that while this dependence captures much of the curve variability, considerable variation remains that is independent of R(V). We use the optical spectrophotometry to verify the presence of structure at intermediate wavelength scales in the curves. The fact that the optical-through-UV portions of the curves are sampled at relatively high resolution makes them very useful for determining how extinction affects different broadband systems, and we provide several examples. Finally, we compare our results to previous investigations
Detection of a Hot Binary Companion of Carinae
We report the detection of a hot companion of Carinae using high
resolution spectra (905 - 1180 \AA) obtained with the Far Ultraviolet
Spectroscopic Explorer (\fuse) satellite. Observations were obtained at two
epochs of the 2024-day orbit: 2003 June during ingress to the 2003.5 X-ray
eclipse and 2004 April several months after egress. These data show that
essentially all the far-UV flux from \etacar shortward of \lya disappeared at
least two days before the start of the X-ray eclipse (2003 June 29), implying
that the hot companion, \etaB, was also eclipsed by the dense wind or extended
atmosphere of \etaA. Analysis of the far-UV spectrum shows that \etaB is a
luminous hot star. The \nii \wll1084-1086 emission feature suggests that it may
be nitrogen-rich. The observed far-UV flux levels and spectral features,
combined with the timing of their disappearance, is consistent with \etacar\
being a massive binary system
New Ultraviolet Extinction Curves for Interstellar Dust in M31
New low-resolution UV spectra of a sample of reddened OB stars in M31 were
obtained with HST/STIS to study the wavelength dependence of interstellar
extinction and the nature of the underlying dust grain populations. Extinction
curves were constructed for four reddened sightlines in M31 paired with closely
matching stellar atmosphere models. The new curves have a much higher S/N than
previous studies. Direct measurements of N(H I) were made using the Ly
absorption lines enabling gas-to-dust ratios to be calculated. The sightlines
have a range in galactocentric distance of 5 to 14 kpc and represent dust from
regions of different metallicities and gas-to-dust ratios. The metallicities
sampled range from Solar to 1.5 Solar. The measured curves show similarity to
those seen in the Milky Way and the Large Magellanic Cloud. The Maximum Entropy
Method was used to investigate the dust composition and size distribution for
the sightlines observed in this program finding that the extinction curves can
be produced with the available carbon and silicon abundances if the metallicity
is super-Solar.Comment: ApJ, in press, 9 pages, 5 figure
One Relation for All Wavelengths: The Far-Ultraviolet to Mid-Infrared Milky Way Spectroscopic R(V) Dependent Dust Extinction Relationship
Dust extinction is one of the fundamental measurements of dust grain sizes,
compositions, and shapes. Most of the wavelength dependent variations seen in
Milky Way extinction are strongly correlated with the single parameter
R(V)=A(V)/E(B-V). Existing R(V) dependent extinction relationships use a
mixture of spectroscopic and photometry observations, hence do not fully
capture all the important dust features nor continuum variations. Using four
existing samples of spectroscopically measured dust extinction curves, we
consistently measure the R(V) dependent extinction relationship
spectroscopically from the far-ultraviolet to mid-infrared for the first time.
Linear fits of A(lambda)/A(V) dependent on R(V) are done using a method that
fully accounts for their significant and correlated uncertainties. These linear
parameters are fit with analytic wavelength dependent functions to determine
the smooth R(V) (2.3-5.6) and wavelength (912 A-32 micron) dependent extinction
relationship. This relationship shows that the far-UV rise, 2175 A bump, and
the three broad optical features are dependent on R(V), but the 10 and 20
micron features are not. Existing literature relationships show significant
deviations compared to this relationship especially in the far-ultraviolet and
infrared. Extinction curves that clearly deviate from this relationship
illustrate that this relationship only describes the average behavior versus
R(V). We find tentative evidence that the relationship may not be linear with
1/R(V) especially in the ultraviolet. For the first time, this relationship
provides measurements of dust extinction that spectroscopically resolve the
continuum and features in the ultraviolet, optical, and infrared as a function
of R(V) enabling detailed studies of dust grains properties and full
spectroscopic accounting for the effects of dust extinction on astrophysical
objects.Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures, ApJ, in pres
Determining the Physical Properties of the B Stars I. Methodology and First Results
We describe a new approach to fitting the UV-to-optical spectra of B stars to
model atmospheres and present initial results. Using a sample of lightly
reddened stars, we demonstrate that the Kurucz model atmospheres can produce
excellent fits to either combined low dispersion IUE and optical photometry or
HST FOS spectrophotometry, as long as the following conditions are fulfilled:
1) an extended grid of Kurucz models is employed,
2) the IUE NEWSIPS data are placed on the FOS absolute flux system using the
Massa & Fitzpatrick (1999) transformation, and
3) all of the model parameters and the effects of interstellar extinction are
solved for simultaneously.
When these steps are taken, the temperatures, gravities, abundances and
microturbulence velocities of lightly reddened B0-A0 V stars are determined to
high precision. We also demonstrate that the same procedure can be used to fit
the energy distributions of stars which are reddened by any UV extinction curve
which can be expressed by the Fitzpatrick & Massa (1990) parameterization
scheme.
We present an initial set of results and verify our approach through
comparisons with angular diameter measurements and the parameters derived for
an eclipsing B star binary. We demonstrate that the metallicity derived from
the ATLAS 9 fits to main sequence B stars is essentially the Fe abundance. We
find that a near zero microturbulence velocity provides the best-fit to all but
the hottest or most luminous stars (where it may become a surrogate for
atmospheric expansion), and that the use of white dwarfs to calibrate UV
spectrophotometry is valid.Comment: 17 pages, including 2 pages of Tables and 6 pages of Figures.
Astrophysical Jounral, in pres
The Global Content, Distribution, and Kinematics of Interstellar O VI in the Large Magellanic Cloud
We present FUSE observations of interstellar O VI absorption towards 12
early-type stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC). O VI 1031.926 Ang
absorption at LMC velocities is seen towards all 12 stars. The observed columns
are in the range log N(O VI)=13.9 to 14.6, with a mean of 14.37. The
observations probe several sight lines projected onto known superbubbles, but
these show relatively little (if any) enhancement in O VI column density
compared to sight lines towards relatively quiescent regions of the LMC. The
observed LMC O VI absorption is broad, with Gaussian dispersions of 30 to 50
km/sec, implying temperatures T<(2-5)x10^6 K. The O VI absorption is typically
displaced -30 km/sec from the corresponding low-ionization absorption
associated with the bulk of the LMC gas. The properties of the LMC O VI
absorption are very similar to those of the Milky Way halo. The average column
density of O VI and the dispersion of the individual measurements about the
mean are identical to those measured for the halo of the Milky Way, even though
the metallicity of the LMC is a factor of ~2.5 lower than the Milky Way. Much
of the LMC O VI may arise in a vertically-extended distribution similar to the
Galactic halo. If the observed O VI absorption is tracing a radiatively cooling
galactic fountain flow, the mass flow rate from one side of the LMC disk is of
the order 1 Msun/yr, with a mass flux per unit area of the disk ~0.02
Msun/yr/kpc^2. (abridged)Comment: Accepted for publiction in the ApJ. 39 pages, including 9 figures and
6 tables. Version with full resolution figures available at
http://fuse.pha.jhu.edu/~howk/Papers
τ Sco: The Discovery of the Clones
The B0.2 V magnetic star τ Sco stands out from the larger population of massive magnetic OB stars due to its remarkable, superionized wind, apparently related to its peculiar magnetic field - a field which is far more complex than the mostly-dipolar fields usually observed in magnetic OB stars. τ Sco is therefore a puzzling outlier in the larger picture of stellar magnetism - a star that still defies interpretation in terms of a physically coherent model. Recently, two early B-type stars were discovered as τ Sco analogues, identified by the striking similarity of their UV spectra to that of τ Sco, which was - until now - unique among OB stars. We present the recent detection of their magnetic fields by the MiMeS collaboration, reinforcing the connection between the presence of a magnetic field and a superionized wind. We will also present ongoing observational efforts undertaken to establish the precise magnetic topology, in order to provide additional constrains for existing models attempting to reproduce the unique wind structure of τ Sco-like stars