183 research outputs found
New findings on the prototypical Of?p stars
In recent years several in-depth investigations of the three Galactic Of?p
stars were undertaken. These multiwavelength studies revealed the peculiar
properties of these objects (in the X-rays as well as in the optical): magnetic
fields, periodic line profile variations, recurrent photometric changes.
However, many questions remain unsolved. To clarify some of the properties of
the Of?p stars, we have continued their monitoring. A new XMM observation and
two new optical datasets were obtained. Additional information for the
prototypical Of?p trio has been found. HD108 has now reached its quiescent,
minimum-emission state, for the first time in 50--60yrs. The echelle spectra of
HD148937 confirm the presence of the 7d variations in the Balmer lines and
reveal similar periodic variations (though of lower amplitudes) in the HeI5876
and HeII4686 lines, underlining its similarities with the other two
prototypical Of?p stars. The new XMM observation of HD191612 was taken at the
same phase in the line modulation cycle but at a different orbital phase as
previous data. It clearly shows that the X-ray emission of HD191612 is
modulated by the 538d period and not the orbital period of 1542d - it is thus
not of colliding-wind origin and the phenomenon responsible for the optical
changes appears also at work in the high-energy domain. There are however
problems: our MHD simulations of the wind magnetic confinement predict both a
harder X-ray flux of a much larger strength than what is observed (the modeled
DEM peaks at 30-40MK, whereas the observed one peaks at 2MK) and narrow lines
(hot gas moving with velocities of 100--200km/s, whereras the observed FWHM is
~2000km/s).Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures (2 in jpg), accepted for publication by A&
Hot stars observed by XMM-Newton I. The catalog and the properties of OB stars
Aims : Following the advent of increasingly sensitive X-ray observatories,
deep observations of early-type stars became possible. However, the results for
only a few objects or clusters have until now been reported and there has been
no large survey comparable to that based upon the ROSAT All-Sky Survey (RASS).
Methods : A limited survey of X-ray sources, consisting of all public XMM
observations (2XMMi) and slew survey data (XMMSL1), is now available. The X-ray
counterparts to hot, massive stars have been searched for in these catalogs.
Results : About 300 OB stars were detected with XMM. Half of them were bright
enough for a spectral analysis to be possible, and we make available the
detailed spectral properties that were derived. The X-ray spectra of O stars
are represented well by low (<1keV) temperature components and seem to indicate
that an absorption column is present in addition to the interstellar
contribution. The X-ray fluxes are well correlated with the bolometric fluxes,
with a scatter comparable to that of the RASS studies and thus larger than
found previously with XMM for some individual clusters. These results contrast
with those of B stars that exhibit a large scatter in the L_X-L_BOL relation,
no additional absorption being found, and the fits indicate a plasma at higher
temperatures. Variability (either within one exposure or between multiple
exposures) was also investigated whenever possible: short-term variations are
far more rare than long-term ones (the former affects a few percent of the
sample, while the latter concerns between one third and two thirds of the
sources). Conclusions : This paper presents the results of the first
high-sensitivity investigation of the overall high-energy properties of a
sizable sample of hot stars.Comment: 10 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication by A&
Massive non-thermal radio emitters: new data and their modelling
During recent years some non-thermal radio emitting OB stars have been
discovered to be binary, or multiple systems. The non-thermal emission is due
to synchrotron radiation that is emitted by electrons accelerated up to high
energies. The electron acceleration occurs at the strong shocks created by the
collision of radiatively-driven winds. Here we summarize the available radio
data and more recent observations for the binary Cyg OB2 No. 9. We also show a
new emission model which is being developed to compare the theoretical total
radio flux and the spectral index with the observed radio light curves. This
comparison will be useful in order to solve fundamental questions, such as the
determination of the stellar mass loss rates, which are perturbed by clumping.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figure, poster at Four Decades of Research on Massive
Stars-A Scientific Meeting in Honour of Anthony F.J.Moffa
WR bubbles and HeII emission
We present the very first high quality images of the HeII 4686 emission in
three high excitation nebulae of the Magellanic Clouds. A fourth high
excitation nebula, situated around the WR star BAT99-2, was analysed in a
previous letter. Using VLT FORS data, we investigate the morphology of the ring
nebulae around the early-type WN stars BAT99-49 & AB7. We derive the total HeII
fluxes for each object and compare them with the most recent theoretical WR
models. Using Halpha, [OIII] and HeI 5876 images along with long-slit
spectroscopy, we investigate the physical properties of these ring nebulae and
find only moderate chemical enrichment. We also surveyed seven other LMC WR
stars but we failed to detect any HeII emission but note that the nebula around
BAT99-11 shows a N/O ratio and an oxygen abundance slightly lower than the LMC
values, while the nebula around BAT99-134 presents moderate chemical enrichment
similar to the one seen near BAT99-2, 49 and AB7. The third high excitation
nebula presented in this paper, N44C, does not harbor stars hotter than mid-O
main sequence stars. It was suggested to be a fossil X-ray nebula ionized but
our observations of N44C reveal no substantial changes in the excitation
compared to previous results reported in the literature.Comment: 13 pages, 8 figures (7 in jpg), accepted by A&A, also available from
http://vela.astro.ulg.ac.be/Preprints/P81/index.htm
The first X-ray survey of Galactic Luminous Blue Variables
Aims: The X-ray emission of massive stars has been studied when these objects
are in their main-sequence phase, as well as in their Wolf-Rayet phase.
However, the X-ray properties of the transitional Luminous Blue Variable (LBV)
phase remain unknown. Methods: Using a dedicated but limited XMM survey as well
as archival XMM and Chandra observations, we performed the first X-ray survey
of LBVs: about half of the known LBVs or candidate LBVs are studied. Results:
Apart from the well known X-ray sources eta Car and Cyg OB2 #12, four
additional LBVs are detected in this survey, though some doubt remains on the
association with the X-ray source for two of these. For the other LBVs, upper
limits on the flux were derived, down to for
PCyg. This variety in the strength of the X-ray emission is discussed, with
particular emphasis on the potential influence of binarity.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures, accepted by A&
The spectral variability and magnetic field characteristics of the Of?p star HD 148937
We report magnetic and spectroscopic observations and modeling of the Of?p
star HD 148937 within the context of the MiMeS LP at the CFHT. Thirty-two high
signal-to-noise ratio circularly polarised (Stokes V) spectra and 13
unpolarised (Stokes I) spectra of HD 148937 were acquired in 2009 and 2010. A
definite detection of a Stokes V Zeeman signature is obtained in the grand mean
of all observations (in both LSD mean profiles and individual spectral lines).
The longitudinal magnetic field inferred from the Stokes V LSD profiles is
consistently negative, in contrast to the essentially zero field strength
measured from the diagnostic null profiles. A period search of equivalent width
measurements confirms the previously-reported 7.03 d variability period. The
variation of equivalent widths is not strictly periodic: we present evidence
for evolution of the amount or distribution of circumstellar plasma.
Interpreting the 7.03 d period as the stellar rotational period within the
context of the ORM, we have phased the equivalent widths and longitudinal field
measurements. The longitudinal field measurements show a weak sinusoidal
variation of constant sign, with extrema out of phase with the H{\alpha}
variation by about 0.25 cycles. The inferred magnetic configuration confirms
the suggestion of Naz\'e et al (2010), who proposed that the weaker variability
of HD 148937 as compared to other members of this class is a consequence of the
stellar geometry. Based on the derived magnetic properties and published wind
characteristics, we find a wind magnetic confinement parameter \eta\ast \simeq
20 and rotation parameter W = 0.12, supporting a picture in which the Halpha
emission and other line variability have their origin in an oblique, rigidly
rotating magnetospheric structure resulting from a magnetically channeled wind.
(Abridged.)Comment: 13 pages, MNRAS. Version 2, small change to Fig. 1
Search for non-thermal X-ray emission in the colliding wind binary Cygnus OB2 #8A⋆
Aims. Cyg OB2 #8A is a massive O-type binary displaying strong non-thermal radio emission. Owing to the compactness of this binary, emission of non-thermal X-ray photons via inverse Compton scattering is expected.
Methods. We first revised the orbital solution for Cyg OB2 #8A using new optical spectra. We then reduced and analysed X-ray spectra obtained with XMM-Newton, Swift, INTEGRAL, and NuSTAR.
Results. The analysis of the XMM-Newton and Swift data allows us to better characterise the X-ray emission from the stellar winds and colliding winds region at energies below 10 keV. We confirm the variation of the broad-band light curve of Cyg OB2 #8A along the orbit with, for the first time, the observation of the maximum emission around phase 0.8. The minimum ratio of the X-ray to bolometric flux of Cyg OB2 #8A remains well above the level expected for single O-type stars, indicating that the colliding wind region is not disrupted during the periastron passage. The analysis of the full set of publicly available INTEGRAL observations allows us to refine the upper limit on the non-thermal X-ray flux of the Cyg OB2 region between 20 and 200 keV. Two NuSTAR observations (phases 0.028 and 0.085) allow us to study the Cyg OB2 #8A spectrum up to 30 keV. These data do not provide evidence of the presence of non-thermal X-rays, but bring more stringent constraints on the flux of a putative non-thermal component. Finally, we computed, thanks to a new dedicated model, the anisotropic inverse Compton emission generated in the wind shock region. The theoretical non-thermal emission appears to be compatible with observational limits and the kinetic luminosity computed from these models is in good agreement with the unabsorbed flux observed below 10 keV
A Changing Wind Collision
We report on the first detection of a global change in the X-ray emitting properties of a wind–wind collision, thanks to XMM-Newton observations of the massive Small Magellenic Cloud (SMC) system HD 5980. While its light curve had remained unchanged between 2000 and 2005, the X-ray flux has now increased by a factor of ~2.5, and slightly hardened. The new observations also extend the observational coverage over the entire orbit, pinpointing the light-curve shape. It has not varied much despite the large overall brightening, and a tight correlation of fluxes with orbital separation is found without any hysteresis effect. Moreover, the absence of eclipses and of absorption effects related to orientation suggests a large size for the X-ray emitting region. Simple analytical models of the wind–wind collision, considering the varying wind properties of the eruptive component in HD 5980, are able to reproduce the recent hardening and the flux-separation relationship, at least qualitatively, but they predict a hardening at apastron and little change in mean flux, contrary to observations. The brightness change could then possibly be related to a recently theorized phenomenon linked to the varying strength of thin-shell instabilities in shocked wind regions
The massive binary HD 152218 revisited: A new colliding wind system in NGC 6231
We present the results of an optical and X-ray monitoring campaign on the
short-period massive SB2 binary HD 152218. Combining our HiRes spectroscopic
data with previous observations, we unveil the contradictions between the
published orbital solutions. In particular, we solve the aliasing on the period
and derive a value close to 5.604 d. Our eccentricity e = 0.259 +/- 0.006 is
slightly lower than previously admitted. We show that HD 152218 is probably
undergoing a relatively rapid apsidal motion of about 3deg/yr and we confirm
the O9IV + O9.7V classification. We derive minimal masses of 15.82 +/- 0.26
Msol operator and 12.00 +/- 0.19 Msol operator and constrain the radius of the
components to R1 = 10.3 +/- 1.3 Rsol and R2 = 7.8 +/- 1.7 Rsol. We also report
the results of an XMM-Newton monitoring of the HD 152218 X-ray emission
throughout its orbital motion. The averaged X-ray spectrum is relatively soft
and it is well reproduced by a 2-T optically thin thermal plasma model with
component temperatures about 0.3 and 0.7 keV. The system presents an increase
of its X-ray flux by about 30% near apastron compared to periastron, which is
interpreted as the signature of an ongoing wind-wind interaction process
occurring within the wind acceleration region.Comment: published by New Astronomy, 13, 20
Hot and cool: two emission-line stars with constrasting behaviours in the same XMM-Newton field
High-energy emissions are good indicators of peculiar behaviours in stars. We
have therefore obtained an XMM-Newton observation of HD155806 and
1RXSJ171502.4-333344, and derived their spectral properties for the first time.
The X-ray spectrum of HD155806 appears soft, even slightly softer than usual
for O-type stars (as shown by a comparison with the O9 star HD155889 in the
same XMM field). It is well-fitted with a two-component thermal model with low
temperatures (0.2 and 0.6 keV), and it shows no overluminosity
(log[LX/Lbol]=-6.75). The high-resolution spectrum, though noisy, reveals a few
broad, symmetric X-ray lines (FWHM ~ 2500 km/s). The X-ray emission is
compatible with the wind-shock model and therefore appears unaffected by the
putative dense equatorial regions at the origin of the Oe classification.
1RXSJ171502.4-333344 is a nearby flaring source of moderate X-ray luminosity
(log[LX/Lbol]=-3), with a soft thermal spectrum composed of narrow lines and
presenting a larger abundance of elements (e.g. Ne) with a high first
ionization potential (FIP) compared to lower-FIP elements. All the evidence
indicates a coronal origin for the X-ray emission, in agreement with the dMe
classification of this source.Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, including annex ; accepted for publication by A&
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