1 / 15

Eta Carinae: Clues to Its Binarity

Eta Carinae: Clues to Its Binarity. Ted Gull. Krister Nielsen* Mike Corcoran John Hillier Kenji Hamaguchi Stefan Ivarsson. Gerd Weigelt* & AMBER Team. * Lead authors in prep. OUTLINE. Brief background of Eta Carinae including periodicity Binarity evidence from: Weigelt D STIS spectra

Download Presentation

Eta Carinae: Clues to Its Binarity

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Eta Carinae: Clues to Its Binarity Ted Gull Krister Nielsen* Mike Corcoran John Hillier Kenji Hamaguchi Stefan Ivarsson Gerd Weigelt* & AMBER Team * Lead authors in prep

  2. OUTLINE • Brief background of Eta Carinae including periodicity • Binarity evidence from: • Weigelt D STIS spectra • ‘Stellar’ Line profiles • A Simple model • VLTI/AMBER - first result • Visualization of wind structure

  3. h Car In late CNO cycle -- N overproduced at expense of C, O • the Great Event in 1840s • -1 magnitude; bright for 20 years • > 12 Mo Ejected -> Homunculus • another event in the 1890s • ~> 0.5 Mo Ejected -> Little Homunculus • Luminosity~ 5x106 Lo T e~15,000K • ==>MASS>100 Mo • Mass Loss Rate: ~10-3 Mo/yr • Wind Velocity: 500-600 km/s • Historical spectrum highly variable

  4. Periodic Variability implies Binarity: • Damineli (1996) noted spectroscopic 5.52-year periodicity • Confirmed in X-rays, IR, visible, UV in 1998.0 • Coordinated observations of 2003.5 minimum • RXTE period 2024+-2 days (M. Corcoran 2005) • GTO (Gull), GO and Hubble Treasury (Davidson) monitoring • FUSE (fuv dropped during minimum), CHANDRA (dropped to few % during minimum), VLT/UVES + STIS (echelle disp1175- 10300A) • Much being learned about properties of ejecta • Homunculus: -513 km/s Fe I, V II, Ti II @ 760K H2 photoexcited during max, CH, OH, NH, CH+ 60K • Little Homunculus: -146 km/s Fe II, Cr II @ 6400K --> 5000K minimum • Strontium filament : Neutral emission region excited by Balmer continuum

  5. B, C and D are very bright emission clumps located to NE • Photoexcited by Eta A & Eta B • Projected distance: 300 - 600 AU • Proper motion, velocity suggest in skirt between lobes, tilted at 450 to skyplane h Car and Weigelt Blobs Weigelt blob excitation requires UV flux of 37,000K Companion (Eta B) Verner, Bruhweiler, Gull 2005 Smith et al 2005 ApJ Weigelt et al 1995 RMxAC

  6. P Cygni Absorption not present in Weigelt D except during periastron Balmer alpha changes: periastron to apastron Red=Periastron Blue=Near-Apastron Eta Carinae Weigelt D (D) _ D D Periastron: 1998.2 Near-Apastron: 2000.2 h _ D

  7. He I lines blueshifted relative to H I wind linesHe I linesappear to have narrow substructure for most of period H I 4103 He I 7065

  8. He I l7065 H I l4013 H I 4103, He I 7065, Fe II 5170, [N II] 5756 comparison

  9. STIS Radial 1998.0-2004.3 H I Absorption Velocities Curves derived from: 9 H I Balmer, Paschen lines 4 He I: 2 singlet & 2 triplet He I Absorption RXTE X-ray flux

  10. Geometry of Wind Interactions Gas pileup from primary wind 15000K 500 km/s 3x10-4Mo/yr 37000K 3000km/s 10-5Mo /yr Primary wind envelopes most of binary system, except dynamic cavity carved out by secondary wind.

  11. 2-D model of wind-windInterface in orbital plane. Pittard & Corcoran: D=30 AU, e=0.9

  12. VLTI/AMBER R=1500 R=1500 Weigelt et al. In prep. ~ 5 mas H I Br g He I 21S - 21P R= 10,000 R= 1500

  13. VLTI/AMBER R=1500 R=1500 IR Cont: 4 mas H I: 4-6 X centered on continuum He I emis~3X; offset? He I absor: ~4 mas

  14. Conclusion/ Frustration Velocity curve does not (easily) provide mass ratio. STIS observations of H I, He I, Fe II ‘wind’ lines & Weigelt blobs consistent with hot binary companion blowing cavity in primary wind and He II ionization leading to He I recombination Prediction: The Holy Grail --> Eta Car B • Apastron: March 2006 VLTI/AMBER observations: We look for • Eta B in continuum ~2% flux of Eta A ~8 mas PA~135o; • He I emission velocity components along wind-wind interface • Issue: sufficient UV-plane sampling?

More Related