Classical Be stars are hot non-supergiant stars surrounded by a gaseous
circumstellar disk that is responsible for the observed infrared (IR) excess
and emission lines. The influence of binarity on these phenomena remains
controversial. We followed the evolution of the environment surrounding the
binary Be star δ Scorpii one year before and one year after the 2011
periastron to check for any evidence of a strong interaction between its
companion and the primary circumstellar disk. We used the VLTI/AMBER
spectro-interferometric instrument operating in the K band in high (12000)
spectral resolution to obtain information on both the disk geometry and
kinematics. Observations were carried out in two emission lines: Brγ
(2.172\,μm) and \ion{He}{i} (2.056\,μm). We detected some important
changes in δ Scorpii's circumstellar disk geometry between the first
observation made in April 2010 and the new observation made in June 2012.
During the last two years the disk has grown at a mean velocity of
0.2\,km\,s−1. This is compatible with the expansion velocity previously
found during the 2001-2007 period. The disk was also found to be asymmetric at
both epochs, but with a different morphology in 2010 and 2012. Considering the
available spectroscopic data showing that the main changes in the emission-line
profiles occurred quickly during the periastron, it is probable that the
differences between the 2010 and 2012 disk geometry seen in our interferometric
data stem from a disk perturbation caused by the companion tidal effects.
However, taking into account that no significant changes have occurred in the
disk since the end of the 2011 observing season, it is difficult to understand
how this induced inhomogeneity has been "frozen" in the disk for such a long
period.Comment: Astronomy and Astrophysics (2013