210 research outputs found
Unraveling the Helix Nebula: Its Structure and Knots
Through HST imaging of the inner part of the main-ring of the Helix Nebula
together with CTIO 4-m images of the fainter outer parts, we have an
unprecedented-quality view of the nearest bright planetary nebula. These images
have allowed determination that the main-ring of the nebula is composed of an
inner-disk of about 499\arcsec diameter (0.52 pc) surrounded by an outer-ring
(in reality a torus) of 742\arcsec diameter (0.77 pc) whose plane is highly
inclined to the plane of the disk. This outer-ring is surrounded by an
outermost-ring of 1500\arcsec (1.76 pc) diameter which is flattened on the side
colliding with the ambient interstellar medium. The inner-disk has an extended
distribution of low density gas along its rotational axis of symmetry and the
disk is optically thick to ionizing radiation, as is the outer-ring.
Published radial velocities of the knots provides support for the
two-component structure of the main-ring of the nebula and to the idea that the
knots found there are expanding along with the nebular material from which it
recently originated. There is a change in the morphology of the knots as a
function of the distance from the local ionization front. This supports a
scenario in which the knots are formed in or near the ionization front and are
then sculpted by the stellar radiation from the central star as the ionization
front advances beyond them.Comment: 30 pages, 20 figures, many figures have reduce fidelity for astroph
preprint. Note: URLs in preprint were change
The [O III] Veil: Astropause of Eta Carinae's Wind?
We present narrowband images of eta Carinae in the light of [O III] 5007
obtained with HST/WFPC2, as well as a ground-based image in the same emission
line with a larger field of view. These images show a thin veil of [O III]
emission around eta Car and its ejecta, confirming the existence of an
oxygen-bearing ``cocoon'' inferred from spectra. This [O III] veil may be the
remnant of the pre-outburst wind of eta Car, and its outer edge probably marks
the interface where eta Car's ejecta meet the stellar wind of the nearby O4
V((f)) star HD303308 or other ambient material -- i.e., it marks the
``astropause'' in eta Car's wind. This veil is part of a more extensive [O III]
shell that appears to be shaped and ionized by HD303308. A pair of HST images
with a 10 yr baseline shows no proper motion, limiting the expansion speed away
from eta Car to 12pm13 km/s, or an expansion age of a few times 10^4 yr. Thus,
this is probably the decelerated pre-outburst LBV wind of eta Car. The [O III]
morphology is very different from that seen in [N II], which traces young knots
of CNO-processed material; this represents a dramatic shift in the chemical
makeup of material recently ejected by eta Car. This change in the chemical
abundances may have resulted from the sudden removal of the star's outer
envelope during eta Car's 19th century outburst or an earlier but similar
event.Comment: 11 pages, 4 figs. Figs 1 and 3 in color. Accepted to AJ, October 200
Galactic Twins of the Ring Nebula Around SN1987A and a Possible LBV-like Phase for Sk-69 202
Some core-collapse supernovae show clear signs of interaction with dense
circumstellar material that often appears to be non-spherical. Circumstellar
nebulae around supernova progenitors provide clues to the origin of that
asymmetry in immediate pre-supernova evolution. Here I discuss outstanding
questions about the formation of the ring nebula around SN1987A and some
implications of similar ring nebulae around Galactic B supergiants. Several
clues hint that SN1987A's nebula may have been ejected in an LBV-like event,
rather than through interacting winds in a transition from a red supergiant to
a blue supergiant.Comment: 2 pages, to appear in procedings of "Massive stars: fundamental
parameters and circumstellar interactions", conference in honor of Virpi
Niemela's 70th birthda
On the He II Emission In Eta Carinae and the Origin of Its Spectroscopic Events
We describe and analyze Hubble Space Telescope (HST) observations of
transient emission near 4680 {\AA} in Eta Car, reported earlier by Steiner &
Damineli (2004). If, as seems probable, this is He II 4687, then it is
a unique clue to Eta Car's 5.5-year cycle. According to our analysis, several
aspects of this feature support a mass-ejection model of the observed
spectroscopic events, and not an eclipse model. The He II emission appeared in
early 2003, grew to a brief maximum during the 2003.5 spectroscopic event, and
then abruptly disappeared. It did not appear in any other HST spectra before or
after the event. The peak brightness was larger than previously reported, and
is difficult to explain even if one allows for an uncertainty factor of order
3. The stellar wind must provide a temporary larger-than-normal energy supply,
and we describe a special form of radiative amplification that may also be
needed. These characteristics are consistent with a class of mass-ejection or
wind-disturbance scenarios, which have implications for the physical structure
and stability of Eta Car.Comment: 47 pages (including all appendices, tabs, & figs), 9 figures, 3
tables; submitted to Astrophysical Journal (2005 March 29), accepted for
publication in Ap
Infrared Observations of the Helix Planetary Nebula
We have mapped the Helix (NGC 7293) planetary nebula (PN) with the IRAC instrument on the Spitzer Space Telescope. The Helix is one of the closest bright PNs and therefore provides an opportunity to resolve the small-scale structure in the nebula. The emission from this PN in the 5.8 and 8 Όm IRAC bands is dominated by the pure rotational lines of molecular hydrogen, with a smaller contribution from forbidden line emission such as [Ar III] in the ionized region. The IRAC images resolve the "cometary knots," which have been previously studied in this PN. The "tails" of the knots and the radial rays extending into the outer regions of the PN are seen in emission in the IRAC bands. IRS spectra on the main ring and the emission in the IRAC bands are consistent with shock-excited H_2 models, with a small (~10%) component from photodissociation regions. In the northeast arc, the H_2 emission is located in a shell outside the Hα emission
A Reanalysis of theUltraviolet Extinction from Interstellar Dust in the Large Magellanic Cloud
We have reanalyzed the Large Magellanic Cloud's (LMC) ultraviolet (UV)
extinction using data from the IUE final archive. Our new analysis takes
advantage of the improved signal--to--noise of the IUE NEWSIPS reduction, the
exclusion of stars with very low reddening, the careful selection of well
matched comparison stars, and an analysis of the effects of Galactic foreground
dust. Differences between the average extinction curves of the 30 Dor region
and the rest of the LMC are reduced compared to previous studies. We find that
there is a group of stars with very weak 2175 Ang. bumps that lie in or near
the region occupied by the supergiant shell, LMC 2, on the southeast side of 30
Dor. The average extinction curves inside and outside LMC 2 show a very
significant difference in 2175 Ang. bump strength, but their far--UV
extinctions are similar. While it is unclear whether or not the extinction
outside the LMC 2 region can be fit with the relation of Cardelli, Clayton and
Mathis (CCM), sightlines near LMC 2 cannot be fit with CCM due to their weak
2175 Ang. bumps. While the extinction properties seen in the LMC lie within the
range of properties seen in the Galaxy, the correlations of UV extinction
properties with environment seen in the Galaxy do not appear to hold in the
LMC.Comment: 29 pages, 10 figures, to be published in Ap
Discovery of Strong Radiative Recombination Continua from The Supernova Remnant IC 443 with Suzaku
We present the Suzaku spectroscopic study of the Galactic middle-aged
supernova remnant (SNR) IC 443. The X-ray spectrum in the 1.75-6.0 keV band is
described by an optically-thin thermal plasma with the electron temperature of
0.6 keV and several additional Lyman lines. We robustly detect, for the first
time, strong radiative recombination continua (RRC) of H-like Si and S around
at 2.7 and 3.5 keV. The ionization temperatures of Si and S determined from the
intensity ratios of the RRC to He-like K-alpha line are 1.0 keV and 1.2 keV,
respectively. We thus find firm evidence for an extremely-overionized
(recombining) plasma. As the origin of the overionization, a thermal conduction
scenario argued in previous work is not favored in our new results. We propose
that the highly-ionized gas were made at the initial phase of the SNR evolution
in dense regions around a massive progenitor, and the low electron temperature
is due to a rapid cooling by an adiabatic expansion.Comment: 5 pages, 5 figures, accepted by ApJ Lette
Photoevaporating flows from the cometary knots in the Helix nebula (NGC 7293)
We explain the Ha emission of the cometary knots in the Helix Nebula (NGC
7293) with an analytical model that describes the emission of the head of the
globules as a photoevaporated flow produced by the incident ionizing radiation
of the central star.We compare these models with the Ha emission obtained from
the HST archival images of the Helix Nebula. From a comparison of the Ha
emission with the predictions of the analytical model we obtain a rate of
ionizing photons from the central star of about 5e45 s^-1, which is consistent
with estimates based on the total Hb flux of the nebula. We also model the
tails of the cometary knots as a photoevaporated wind from a neutral shadow
region produced by the diffuse ionizing photon field of the nebula. A
comparison with the HST images allows us to obtain a direct determination of
the value of the diffuse ionizing flux. We compare the ratio of diffuse to
direct stellar flux as a function of radius inside an HII region with those
obtained from the observational data through the analytical tail and head wind
model. The agreement of this model with the values determined from the
observations of the knots is excellent.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
A spectral and spatial analysis of eta Carinae's diffuse X-ray emission using CHANDRA
The luminous unstable star (star system) eta Carinae is surrounded by an
optically bright bipolar nebula, the Homunculus and a fainter but much larger
nebula, the so-called outer ejecta. As images from the EINSTEIN and ROSAT
satellites have shown, the outer ejecta is also visible in soft X-rays, while
the central source is present in the harder X-ray bands. With our CHANDRA
observations we show that the morphology and properties of the X-ray nebula are
the result of shocks from fast clumps in the outer ejecta moving into a
pre-existing denser circumstellar medium. An additional contribution to the
soft X-ray flux results from mutual interactions of clumps within the ejecta.
Spectra extracted from the CHANDRA data yield gas temperatures kT of 0.6-0.76
keV. The implied pre-shock velocities of 670-760 km/s are within the scatter of
the velocities we measure for the majority of the clumps in the corresponding
regions. Significant nitrogen enhancements over solar abundances are needed for
acceptable fits in all parts of the outer ejecta, consistent with CNO processed
material and non-uniform enhancement. The presence of a diffuse spot of hard
X-ray emission at the S condensation shows some contribution of the highest
velocity clumps and further underlines the multicomponent, non-equilibrium
nature of the X-ray nebula. The detection of an X-ray ``bridge'' between the
northern and southern part of the X-ray nebula and an X-ray shadow at the
position of the NN bow can be attributed to a large expanding disk, which would
appear as an extension of the equatorial disk. No soft emission is seen from
the Homunculus, or from the NN bow or the ``strings''.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures, accepted by A&A; paper including images with
full resolution available at
http://www.astro.ruhr-uni-bochum.de/kweis/publications.htm
An improved method for statistical studies of the internal kinematics of HII regions: the case of M 83
We present the integrated Halpha emission line profile for 157 HII regions in
the central 3.4' x 3.4' of the galaxy M 83 (NGC 5236). Using the Fabry-Perot
interferometer GHaFaS, on the 4.2 m William Herschel on La Palma, we show the
importance of a good characterization of the instrumental response function for
the study of line profile shapes. The luminosity-velocity dispersion relation
is also studied, and in the log(L)-log(sigma) plane we do not find a linear
relation, but an upper envelope with equation log(L)=0.9 *log(sigma)+38.1. For
the adopted distance of 4.5 Mpc, the upper envelope appears at the luminosity
L=10^38.5 ergs, in full agreement with previous studies of other galaxies,
reinforcing the idea of using HII regions as standard candles.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
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