hα emission
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Author(s):  
Jia Yin ◽  
Zhiwei Chen ◽  
Yong-Qiang Yao ◽  
Jian Chen ◽  
Bin Li ◽  
...  

Abstract Early-B stars, much less energetic than O stars, may create an HII region that appears as radio-quiet. We report the identification of new early-B stars associated with the radio-quiet HII region G014.645--00.606 in the M17 complex. The ratio-quiet HII region G014.645--00.606 is adjacent to three radio-quiet WISE HII region candidates \citep{2014ApJS..212....1A}. The ionizing sources of the radio-quiet HII regions are expected to later than B1V, given the sensitivity about 1-2 mJy of the MAGPIS 20 cm survey. The stars were first selected if their parallaxes of GAIA EDR3 match that of the 22 GHz H2O maser source within the same region. We used the color-magnitude diagram made from the ZTF photometric catalog to select the candidates for massive stars because the intrinsic g-r colors of massive stars change little from B-type to O-type stars. Five stars lie in the areas of the color-magnitude diagram where either reddened massive stars or evolved post-main sequence stars of lower masses are commonly found. Three of the five stars, sources 1, 2, and 3, are located at the cavities of the three IR bubbles, and extended Hα emission is detected around the three IR bubbles. We suggest that sources 1, 2, and 3 are candidates for early-B stars associated with the radio-quiet region G014.645--00.606. Particularly, source 1 is an EW type eclipsing binary with a short period of 0.825 day, while source 2 is an EA type eclipsing binary with a short period of 0.919 day. The physical parameters of the two binary systems have been derived through the PHOEBE model. Source 1 is a twin binary of two stars with Teff ≈ 23,500 K, and source 2 contains a hotter component (Teff≈20,100 K) and a cooler one (Teff≈15,500 K). The O-C values of source 1 show a trend of decline, implying that the period of source is deceasing. Source 1 is likely a contacting early-B twin binary, for which mass transfer might cause its orbit to shrink.


2021 ◽  
Vol 923 (1) ◽  
pp. 10
Author(s):  
Jason P. Aufdenberg ◽  
Joseph M. Hammill

Abstract The large, faint Hα emission surrounding the early B-star binary Spica has been used to constrain the total hydrogen recombination rate of the nebula and indirectly probe the Lyman continuum luminosity of the primary star. Early analysis suggested that a stellar atmosphere model, consistent with Spica A’s spectral type, has a Lyman continuum luminosity about two times lower than required to account for the measured Hα surface brightness within the nebula. To more consistently model both the stellar and nebular emission, we have used a model atmosphere for Spica A that includes the effects of gravity darkening as input to photoionization models to produce synthetic Hα surface brightness distributions for comparison to data from the Southern Hα Sky Survey Atlas. This paper presents a method for the computation of projected surface brightness profiles from 1D volume emissivity models and constrains both stellar and nebular parameters. A mean effective temperature for Spica A of ≃24,800 K is sufficient to match both the observed absolute spectrophotometry, from the far-UV to the near-IR, and radial Hα surface brightness distributions. Model hydrogen densities increase with the distance from the star, more steeply and linearly toward the southeast. The northwest matter-bounded portion of the nebula is predicted to leak ∼17% of Lyman continuum photons. Model H ii region column densities are consistent with archival observations along the line of sight.


2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (11) ◽  
pp. 280
Author(s):  
Wei Zhang ◽  
Hong Wu ◽  
Chao-Jian Wu ◽  
Juan-Juan Ren ◽  
Jian-Hun Chen ◽  
...  

Abstract We introduce a method of subtracting geocoronal Hα emissions from the spectra of LAMOST medium-resolution spectral survey of Galactic nebulae (LAMOST-MRS-N). The flux ratios of the Hα sky line to the adjacent OH λ6554 single line do not show a pattern or gradient distribution in a plate. More interestingly, the ratio is well correlated to solar altitude, which is the angle of the Sun relative to the Earthʼs horizon. It is found that the ratio decreases from 0.8 to 0.2 with the decreasing solar altitude from –17 to –73 degree. Based on this relation, which is described by a linear function, we can construct the Hα sky component and subtract it from the science spectrum. This method has been applied to the LAMOST-MRS-N data, and the contamination level of the Hα sky to nebula is reduced from 40% to less than 10%. The new generated spectra will significantly improve the accuracy of the classifications and the measurements of physical parameters of Galactic nebulae.


Universe ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (11) ◽  
pp. 440
Author(s):  
Richard de de Grijs ◽  
Devika Kamath

Cool stars with convective envelopes of spectral types F and later tend to exhibit magnetic activity throughout their atmospheres. The presence of strong and variable magnetic fields is evidenced by photospheric starspots, chromospheric plages and coronal flares, as well as by strong Ca ii H+K and Hα emission, combined with the presence of ultraviolet resonance lines. We review the drivers of stellar chromospheric activity and the resulting physical parameters implied by the observational diagnostics. At a basic level, we explore the importance of stellar dynamos and their activity cycles for a range of stellar types across the Hertzsprung–Russell diagram. We focus, in particular, on recent developments pertaining to stellar rotation properties, including the putative Vaughan–Preston gap. We also pay specific attention to magnetic variability associated with close binary systems, including RS Canum Venaticorum, BY Draconis, W Ursae Majoris and Algol binaries. At the present time, large-scale photometric and spectroscopic surveys are becoming generally available, thus leading to a resurgence of research into chromospheric activity. This opens up promising prospects to gain a much improved understanding of chromospheric physics and its wide-ranging impact.


2021 ◽  
Vol 919 (2) ◽  
pp. 73
Author(s):  
Justin A. Kader ◽  
Liese van Zee ◽  
Kristen B. W. McQuinn ◽  
Laura C. Hunter

Author(s):  
S H Ramírez ◽  
J Echevarría

Abstract We present a second paper of the analyses of high-dispersion spectroscopic observations of the magnetic cataclysmic variable AE Aquarii. We focus our efforts on the study of the emission lines and their radial velocities. We detect a sinusoidal behaviour, in several of the observing runs, with variable amplitudes. Of those runs presented, the velocity curve of 2000 August shows less instability in the emission material. In this case we obtain K1 = 114 ± 8 kms−1, which we take as our best value for the radial velocity of the primary. This result is consistent within 2σ with previously published values obtained using indirect methods. We interpret this consistency as observational evidence of material orbiting the rapidly-rotating primary star. We present a Doppler Tomography study, which shows that the Hα emission is primarily concentrated within a blob in the lower left quadrant; a structure similar to that predicted by the propeller model. However, for 2000 August, we find the emission centred around the position of the white dwarf, which supports the possibility of the K1 value of this run of being a valid approximation of the orbital motion of the white dwarf.


2021 ◽  
Vol 917 (2) ◽  
pp. L30
Author(s):  
Yuhiko Aoyama ◽  
Gabriel-Dominique Marleau ◽  
Masahiro Ikoma ◽  
Christoph Mordasini

Author(s):  
M E Shultz ◽  
E Alecian ◽  
V Petit ◽  
S Bagnulo ◽  
T Böhm ◽  
...  

Abstract W 601 (NGC 6611 601) is one of the handful of known magnetic Herbig Ae/Be stars. We report the analysis of a large dataset of high-resolution spectropolarimetry. The star is a previously unreported spectroscopic binary, consisting of 2 B2 stars with a mass ratio of 1.8, masses of 12 M⊙ and 6.2 M⊙, in an eccentric 110-day orbit. The magnetic field belongs to the secondary, W 601 B. The Hα emission is consistent with an origin in W 601 B’s centrifugal magnetosphere; the star is therefore not a classical Herbig Be star in the sense that its emission is not formed in an accretion disk. However, the low value of log g = 3.8 determined via spectroscopic analysis, and the star’s membership in the young NGC 6611 cluster, are most consistent with it being on the pre-main sequence. The rotational period inferred from the variability of the Hα line and the longitudinal magnetic field 〈Bz〉 is 1.13 d. Modelling of Stokes V and 〈Bz〉 indicates a surface dipolar magnetic field Bd between 6 and 11 kG. With its strong emission, rapid rotation, and strong surface magnetic field, W 601 B is likely a precursor to Hα-bright magnetic B-type stars such as σ Ori E. By contrast, the primary is an apparently non-magnetic (Bd < 300 G) pre-main sequence early B-type star. In accordance with expectations from magnetic braking, the non-magnetic primary is apparently more rapidly rotating than the magnetic star.


2021 ◽  
Vol 5 (3) ◽  
pp. 50
Author(s):  
Sabine Chu ◽  
Stan DeLaurentiis ◽  
Alejandro Núñez ◽  
Marcel A. Agüeros ◽  
Jason L. Curtis ◽  
...  
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