Direct Optical Imaging of Be Disks

2000 ◽  
Vol 175 ◽  
pp. 129-140
Author(s):  
Philippe Stee

AbstractInterferometry in the visible now provides milliarcsecond spatial resolution and thus can be used for studying the circumstellar environment of Be stars. In this review I will first introduce the two basic quantities that an interferometer can access: the modulus and the phase of the visibility. I will illustrate how these two quantities can be used to understand the physics of Be disks through recent results from the VLA, the MkII and the GI2T interferometers. I will insist on the importance and the potential of coupling high angular resolution with high spectral resolution to the study of Be disks. Since the possibility of direct optical imaging of Be disks will be limited due to complexity and time consumption, I will present the role models can play in interpreting high angular resolution observations when direct imaging become difficult. Finally I will draw up a list of challenging objectives for the next generation of synthetic arrays (GI2T/REGAIN, Keck, ST3, VLTI) which will bring new understanding of active hot stars physics.

2000 ◽  
Vol 175 ◽  
pp. 174-177 ◽  
Author(s):  
O. Chesneau ◽  
K. Rousselet-Perraut ◽  
F. Vakili

AbstractThe classical detection of magnetic fields in Be stars remains a challenge due to the sensitivity threshold and geometrical cancelation of the field effects. We propose to study the Zeeman effect using Spectro-Polarimetric INterferometry (SPIN) which consists of the simultaneous use of polarimetry and very high angular resolution provided by long baseline interferometers. As monitoring of the instrumental polarisation is mandatory in order to calibrate interferometric observations in any case, the polarised signal is a natural by-product of interferometers. This method will be tested on the GI2T interferometer thanks to its high spectral resolution and its polarimetric capabilities.


2004 ◽  
Vol 221 ◽  
pp. 389-394
Author(s):  
C. P. Dullemond ◽  
C. Dominik ◽  
R. van Boekel ◽  
R. Waters ◽  
M. van den Ancker

We show that there exists a simple geometric picture for the geometries of protoplanetary disks around Herbig Ae/Be stars that explains the two main kinds of spectral energy distributions found for these objects, and that makes predictions that are qualitatively in agreement with currently available spatially resolved images and/or interferometric measurements. Also it qualitatively explains the phenomenon of UX Orionis variability.


2010 ◽  
Vol 6 (S272) ◽  
pp. 325-336 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alex C. Carciofi

AbstractCircumstellar discs of Be stars are thought to be formed from material ejected from a fast-spinning central star. This material possesses large amounts of angular momentum and settles in a quasi-Keplerian orbit around the star. This simple description outlines the basic issues that a successful disc theory must address: 1) What is the mechanism responsible for the mass ejection? 2) What is the final configuration of the material? 3) How the disc grows? With the very high angular resolution that can be achieved with modern interferometers operating in the optical and infrared we can now resolve the photosphere and immediate vicinity of nearby Be stars. Those observations are able to provide very stringent tests for our ideas about the physical processes operating in those objects. This paper discusses the basic hydrodynamics of viscous decretion discs around Be stars. The model predictions are quantitatively compared to observations, demonstrating that the viscous decretion scenario is currently the most viable theory to explain the discs around Be stars.


2014 ◽  
Vol 9 (S307) ◽  
pp. 297-300 ◽  
Author(s):  
Th. Rivinius ◽  
W.J. de Wit ◽  
Z. Demers ◽  
A. Quirrenbach ◽  

AbstractOHANA is an interferometric snapshot survey of the gaseous circumstellar environments of hot stars, carried out by the VLTI group at the Paranal observatory. It aims to characterize the mass-loss dynamics (winds/disks) at unexplored spatial scales for many stars. The survey employs the unique combination of AMBER's high spectral resolution with the unmatched spatial resolution provided by the VLTI. Because of the spatially unresolved central OBA-type star, with roughly neutral colour terms, their gaseous environments are among the easiest objects to be observed with AMBER, yet the extent and kinematics of the line emission regions are of high astrophysical interest.


2018 ◽  
Vol 610 ◽  
pp. A4 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Guélin ◽  
N. A. Patel ◽  
M. Bremer ◽  
J. Cernicharo ◽  
A. Castro-Carrizo ◽  
...  

During their late pulsating phase, AGB stars expel most of their mass in the form of massive dusty envelopes, an event that largely controls the composition of interstellar matter. The envelopes, however, are distant and opaque to visible and NIR radiation: their structure remains poorly known and the mass-loss process poorly understood. Millimeter-wave interferometry, which combines the advantages of longer wavelength, high angular resolution and very high spectral resolution is the optimal investigative tool for this purpose. Mm waves pass through dust with almost no attenuation. Their spectrum is rich in molecular lines and hosts the fundamental lines of the ubiquitous CO molecule, allowing a tomographic reconstruction of the envelope structure. The circumstellar envelope IRC +10 216 and its central star, the C-rich TP-AGB star closest to the Sun, are the best objects for such an investigation. Two years ago, we reported the first detailed study of the CO(2–1) line emission in that envelope, made with the IRAM 30-m telescope. It revealed a series of dense gas shells, expanding at a uniform radial velocity. The limited resolution of the telescope (HPBW 11″) did not allow us to resolve the shell structure. We now report much higher angular resolution observations of CO(2–1), CO(1–0), CN(2–1) and C4H(24–23) made with the SMA, PdB and ALMA interferometers (with synthesized half-power beamwidths of 3″, 1″ and 0.3″, respectively). Although the envelope appears much more intricate at high resolution than with an 11″ beam, its prevailing structure remains a pattern of thin, nearly concentric shells. The average separation between the brightest CO shells is 16″ in the outer envelope, where it appears remarkably constant. Closer to the star (<40″), the shell pattern is denser and less regular, showing intermediary arcs. Outside the small (r< 0.3′′) dust formation zone, the gas appears to expand radially at a constant velocity, 14.5 km s-1, with small turbulent motions. Based on that property, we have reconstructed the 3D structure of the outer envelope and have derived the gas temperature and density radial profiles in the inner (r< 25′′) envelope. The shell-intershell density contrast is found to be typically 3. The over-dense shells have spherical or slightly oblate shapes and typically extend over a few steradians, implying isotropic mass loss. The regular spacing of shells in the outer envelope supports the model of a binary star system with a period of 700 yr and a near face-on elliptical orbit. The companion fly-by triggers enhanced episodes of mass loss near periastron. The densification of the shell pattern observed in the central part of the envelope suggests a more complex scenario for the last few thousand years.


1997 ◽  
Vol 163 ◽  
pp. 152-161
Author(s):  
Gary D. Schmidt

AbstractDisk-like structures have been inferred to exist in the nuclei of galaxies over the entire range in nuclear activity. These form the essence of the Unified Scheme, which has had great success in accounting for AGN of a wide variety of perceived types. Recent progress along this front is summarized, including new polarimetric results, high-angular resolution optical imaging, and interferometry at radio wavelengths.


1995 ◽  
Vol 149 ◽  
pp. 365-368
Author(s):  
Ph. Stee ◽  
D. Bonneau ◽  
P. Lawson ◽  
F. Morand ◽  
D. Mourard ◽  
...  

AbstractThe GI2T is an optical long-baseline Michelson interferometer which analyses dispersed stellar fringes in the multi-speckle mode with a spectral resolution of one Angstrom while the spatial resolution is about one milliarcsecond. This makes the GI2T a powerful instrument able to perform MSI of extended sources like Be stars or shell stars. In order to interpret these data we have developed a latitude dependent radiative wind model for Be stars. This numerical code enables us to compare directly computed 2D maps in some Balmer lines (Hα and Hβ) with high angular resolution data of some Be stars.


1999 ◽  
Vol 169 ◽  
pp. 115-118
Author(s):  
Ph. Stee ◽  
D. Bonneau ◽  
D. Mourard ◽  
F. Vakili

AbstractNumerous models have been developed during the last two decades which try to fit a small number of “classical” observables as closely as possible (i.e Hα line profile and continuum energy distribution or polarization data). Nevertheless, little has been done to include High Angular Resolution Observations (HARO) in simulations in spite of the fact that such data can strongly constrain radiative wind models. In the following, we shall review recent results coming from HARO of active B stars and we shall focus on our radiative wind model for active hot stars which integrates these measurements.


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