167 research outputs found
Disk winds of B[e] supergiants
The class of B[e] supergiants is characterized by a two-component stellar
wind consisting of a normal hot star wind in the polar zone and a slow and
dense disk-like wind in the equatorial region. The properties of the disk wind
are discussed using satellite UV spectra of stars seen edge-on, i.e. through
the equatorial disk. These observations show that the disk winds are extremely
slow, 50-90 km/s, i.e. a factor of about 10 slower than expected from the
spectral types. Optical emission lines provide a further means to study the
disk wind. This is discussed for line profiles of forbidden lines formed in the
disk.Comment: 7 pages, LaTeX, 3 ps figures, uses lamuphys.sty from Springer-Verlag,
to be published in the proceedings of IAU Coll. 169 "Variable and
Non-spherical Stellar Winds in Luminous Hot Stars" held in Heidelberg 199
X-ray and optical observations of 1RXS J154814.5-452845: a new intermediate polar with soft X-ray emission
We report the identification of the ROSAT all-sky survey source 1RXS
J154814.5-452845as new intermediate polar and present the results from
follow-up optical and X-ray observations. The source shows pulsations with a
period of 693 s both in the optical and X-ray light curves and the detection of
a synodic frequency strongly suggests that this is the rotation period of the
white dwarf. Although the one day aliasing and the sparse optical data coverage
does not allow to unambiguously identify the orbital period, the most likely
values of 9.37 h and 6.72 h add 1RXS J154814.5-452845 to the intermediate
polars with the longest orbital periods known. The optical spectrum displays
features from the late type secondary and shows the presence of broad
absorption lines at \Hbet and higher order Balmer lines which may be a
signature of the white dwarf atmosphere, very similar to V 709 Cas. The average
X-ray spectra as obtained by the EPIC instruments on board XMM-Newton show hard
emission typical for this class of objects but also the presence of soft
blackbody-like emission similar to that seen from soft intermediate polars and
thought to arise from the white dwarf surface heated by the hard X-rays. The
best fit model comprises thermal emission from multi-temperature plasma in
collisional ionization equilibrium with a continuous temperature distribution
up to a maximum of 60 keV, an Fe fluorescence line at 6.4 keV and with
equivalent width of 260 eV and a blackbody component with kT of 86 eV. The hard
X-ray emission is absorbed by matter covering 47% of the X-ray source with an
equivalent hydrogen density of \ohcm{23}. The remaining hard emission is
absorbed by a much reduced column density of 1.5\hcm{21} as is the soft
blackbody emission. (truncated)Comment: 14 pages, Latex, with 19 figures, accepted for publication in
Astronomy and Astrophysic
New spectroscopic observations of the B[e]/K binary system MWC 623
The B[e]/K binary system MWC 623 was reinvestigated using new spectroscopic
observations. The absorption lines of the K and the B star do not exhibit any
significant radial velocity variations over a time interval of 14 years. The
spectral classification using a recent echelle spectrum yielded spectral types
of K2II-Ib and B4III. The luminosity class of the K star gives an estimate of
the distance towards MWC 623 of 2.4(+1.4/-0.9) kpc. This is consistent with the
kinematic distance of 2.0(+0.6/-0.3) kpc. The masses derived from the locations
of the binary components in the H-R diagram are 7+-1.5 Msun and 7.5+-2.5 Msun
for the B and K star, respectively, i.e. the mass ratio is close to 1. Both
stars are coeval with an age of 50+10/-20 Myr as shown by the comparison with
isochrones. The high luminosity of the K star excludes a pre-main sequence
evolutionary phase as explanation for the strong LiI lambda 6708 absorption
line observed in the late-type component. Rather, the high lithium abundance is
a consequence of the young age. Likewise, the B[e] star is a slightly evolved
object starting it post-main sequence evolution.Comment: 8 pages, 11 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in Astronomy
& Astrophysic
X-ray and optical observations of 1RXS J154814.5-452845: a new intermediate polar with soft X-ray emission
We report the identification of the ROSAT all-sky survey source 1RXS J154814.5-452845as new intermediate polar and present the results from follow-up optical and X-ray observations. The source shows pulsations with a period of 693 s both in the optical and X-ray light curves and the detection of a synodic frequency strongly suggests that this is the rotation period of the white dwarf. Although the one day aliasing and the sparse optical data coverage does not allow to unambiguously identify the orbital period, the most likely values of 9.37 h and 6.72 h add 1RXS J154814.5-452845 to the intermediate polars with the longest orbital periods known. The optical spectrum displays features from the late type secondary and shows the presence of broad absorption lines at \Hbet and higher order Balmer lines which may be a signature of the white dwarf atmosphere, very similar to V 709 Cas. The average X-ray spectra as obtained by the EPIC instruments on board XMM-Newton show hard emission typical for this class of objects but also the presence of soft blackbody-like emission similar to that seen from soft intermediate polars and thought to arise from the white dwarf surface heated by the hard X-rays. The best fit model comprises thermal emission from multi-temperature plasma in collisional ionization equilibrium with a continuous temperature distribution up to a maximum of 60 keV, an Fe fluorescence line at 6.4 keV and with equivalent width of 260 eV and a blackbody component with kT of 86 eV. The hard X-ray emission is absorbed by matter covering 47% of the X-ray source with an equivalent hydrogen density of \ohcm{23}. The remaining hard emission is absorbed by a much reduced column density of 1.5\hcm{21} as is the soft blackbody emission. (truncated
Kinematical structure of the circumstellar environments of galactic B[e]-type stars
High resolution line profiles are presented for selected forbidden and
permitted emission lines of a sample of galactic B[e]-type stars. The spectral
resolution corresponds to 5-7 km/s with the exception of some line profiles
which were observed with a resolution of 9-13 km/s. All Ha profiles are
characterized by a narrow split or single emission component with a width of
about 150-250 km/s (FWHM) and broad wings with a full width of ~1000-2000 km/s.
The Ha profiles can be classified into three groups: double-peaked profiles
representing the majority, single-peaked emission-line profiles, and normal P
Cygni-type profiles. The forbidden lines exhibit in most cases double-peaked
profiles. The split forbidden line profiles have peak separations of as little
as 10 km/s. The ratio of violet to red emission peak intensities, V/R, is
predominantly smaller or equal to 1. Theoretical profiles were calculated for
the optically thin case. A latitude-dependent stellar wind with a radial
expansion and a velocity decreasing from the pole to the equator was adopted.
In addition an equatorial dust ring with various optical depths was assumed.
This model can explain split lines and line asymmetries observed in some stars.
Moreover, the V/R ratios can be understood in terms of this model. The
comparison of the observed line profiles with the models thus confirms the
assumption of disk-like line-formation regions as commonly adopted for
B[e]-type stars.Comment: Astronomy & Astrophysics, in pres
The Structure of the Homunculus. III. Forming a Disk and Bipolar Lobes in a Rotating Surface Explosion
We present a semi-analytic model for shaping the nebula around eta Carinae
that accounts for the simultaneous production of bipolar lobes and an
equatorial disk through a rotating surface explosion. Material is launched
normal to the surface of an oblate rotating star with an initial kick velocity
that scales approximately with the local escape speed. Thereafter, ejecta
follow ballistic orbital trajectories, feeling only a central force
corresponding to a radiatively reduced gravity. Our model is conceptually
similar to the wind-compressed disk model of Bjorkman & Cassinelli, but we
modify it to an explosion instead of a steady line-driven wind, we include a
rotationally-distorted star, and we treat the dynamics somewhat differently.
Continuum-driving avoids the disk inhibition that normally operates in
line-driven winds. Our model provides a simple method by which rotating hot
stars can simultaneously produce intrinsically bipolar and equatorial mass
ejections, without an aspherical environment or magnetic fields. Although
motivated by eta Carinae, the model may have generic application to other LBVs,
B[e] stars, or SN1987A's nebula. When near-Eddington radiative driving is less
influential, our model generalizes to produce bipolar morphologies without
disks, as seen in many PNe.Comment: ApJ accepted, 9 page
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