49 results on '"Huenemoerder, David P."'
Search Results
2. Observed epochal variations in X-ray lines from the O supergiant ζ Puppis do not require substantial changes in the wind mass flux.
- Author
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Gunderson, Sean J, Gayley, Kenneth G, Huenemoerder, David P, Pradhan, Pragati, and Miller, Nathan A
- Subjects
X-ray spectra ,X-rays ,STELLAR winds ,FLUX pinning ,SUPERGIANT stars - Abstract
We fit the high-resolution Chandra X-ray spectra of the O supergiant ζ Puppis using the variable boundary condition (VBC) line model to test the stability of its mass-loss rate between two epochs of observation: 2000 March and 2018 July – 2019 August. At issue is whether the observed variations are induced by global changes in the cool (unshocked) wind itself or are isolated to the local pockets of hot gas (i.e. changes in the frequency and location of the shocks). Evidence in the literature favoured the possibility of a 40 per cent increase in the mass flux of the entire stellar wind, based on X-ray reabsorption from a line-deshadowing-instability-inspired parametrization, whereas our fit parameters are consistent with a constant mass flux with a change in the velocity variations that determine the locations where shocks form. Our results suggest the shocks in the more recent data are formed at somewhat larger radii, mimicking the enhanced blueshifts and increased line fluxes interpreted in the previous analysis as being due to increases in both the X-ray generation and reabsorption from an overall stronger wind. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Survey of X-Rays from Massive Stars Observed at High Spectral Resolution with Chandra.
- Author
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Pradhan, Pragati, Huenemoerder, David P., Ignace, Richard, Nichols, Joy S., and Pollock, A. M. T.
- Subjects
- *
SUPERGIANT stars , *X-rays , *TERMINAL velocity , *WOLF-Rayet stars , *STELLAR winds - Abstract
Identifying trends between observational data and the range of physical parameters of massive stars is a critical step to the still-elusive full understanding of the source, structure, and evolution of X-ray emission from the stellar winds, requiring a substantial sample size and systematic analysis methods. As of 2022, the Chandra data archive contains 37 high-resolution spectra of O, B, and WR stars, observed with the Chandra/HETGS, and of sufficient quality to fit the continua and emission-line profiles. Using a systematic approach to the data analysis, we explore morphological trends in the line profiles (i.e., O, Ne, Mg, and Si) and find that the centroid offsets of resolved lines versus wavelength can be separated in three empirically defined groups based on the amount of line broadening and centroid offset. Using Fe xvii (15.01, 17.05 Å) and Ne x α (12.13 Å) lines, which are prevalent among the sample stars, we find a well-correlated linear trend of increasing Full Width Half Maximum with faster wind terminal velocity. The H-like/He-like total line flux ratio for strong lines displays different trends with spectral class depending on ion species. Some of the sources in our sample have peculiar properties (e.g., magnetic and γ Cas-analog stars) and we find that these sources stand out as outliers from more regular trends. Finally, our spectral analysis is presented summarily in terms of X-ray spectral energy distributions in specific luminosity for each source, including tables of line identifications and fluxes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Support for the standard picture of thermal X-rays in the wind of ζ Puppis from dielectronic recombination of He-like ions.
- Author
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Gunderson, Sean J, Gayley, Kenneth G, and Huenemoerder, David P
- Subjects
ION recombination ,PROTON-proton interactions ,EARLY stars ,X-rays ,ELECTRON paramagnetic resonance ,PLASMA diagnostics ,HOT carriers - Abstract
We use the line ratios of resolved X-ray resonance and satellite line pairs from Si xiii and Mg xi ions to test the widely held assumption that the shocked plasma in the wind of hot stars is in collisional ionization equilibrium. We specifically apply this test to the prototypical O supergiant ζ Puppis, as its line ratios are well resolved in its total 813 ks Chandra observation. This satellite-to-resonance line ratio is known to be a reliable diagnostic of plasma temperature but has yet to be applied to hot stars due to needing a long exposure time to see both lines above the continuum. In testing the assumed plasma state, we also provide evidence against significant ionization and excitation from proton collisions. Since dielectronic recombination (DR) allows somewhat lower energy free electrons to excite resonance lines than by the usual collisional pathways, we also use the DR flux ratios to extend diagnostics of the ionization fraction of the parent ion to lower temperatures than any other method can achieve. Also, the DR ratio supports a concept of an average free electron temperature, for each target ion used, which can constrain heating models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. The Chandra High‐Energy Transmission Grating: Design, Fabrication, Ground Calibration, and 5 Years in Flight
- Author
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Canizares, Claude R., Davis, John E., Dewey, Daniel, Flanagan, Kathryn A., Galton, Eugene B., Huenemoerder, David P., Ishibashi, Kazunori, Markert, Thomas H., Marshall, Herman L., McGuirk, Michael, Schattenburg, Mark L., Schulz, Norbert S., Smith, Henry I., and Wise, Michael
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Testing the reliability of X-rays as a tool for constraining mass-loss rates of hot stars.
- Author
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Gunderson, Sean J, Gayley, Kenneth G, Pradhan, Pragati, Huenemoerder, David P, and Miller, Nathan A
- Subjects
EARLY stars ,TEST reliability ,RELIABILITY in engineering ,X-rays ,X-ray spectra ,STELLAR winds - Abstract
We fit a new line shape model to Chandra X-ray spectra of the O supergiant ζ Puppis to test the robustness of mass-loss rates derived from X-ray wind line profiles against different assumed heating models. Our goal is to track the hot gas by replacing the common assumption that it is proportional to the cool gas emission measure. Instead of assuming a turn-on radius for the hot gas (as appropriate for the line-deshadowing instability internal to the wind), we parametrize the hot gas in terms of a mean-free path for accelerated low-density gas to encounter slower high-density material. This alternative model is equally successful as previous approaches at fitting X-ray spectral lines in the 5–17 Å wavelength range. We find that the characteristic radius where the hottest gas appears is inversely proportional to line-formation temperature, suggesting that stronger shocks appear generally closer to the surface. This picture is more consistent with pockets of low density, rapid acceleration at the lower boundary than with an internally generated wind instability. We also infer an overall wind mass-loss rate from the profile shapes with a technique used previously in the literature. In doing so, we find evidence that the mass-loss rate derived from X-ray wind line profiles is not robust with respect to changes in the specific heating picture used. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. An Arcus view of stellar space weather.
- Author
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Brickhouse, Nancy S., Brenneman, Laura W., Günther, Hans Moritz, Huenemoerder, David P., Ptak, Andy, Smith, Randall K., and Wolk, Scott J.
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SPACE environment ,CIRCUMSTELLAR matter ,STELLAR structure ,SOFT X rays ,HR diagrams ,X-ray spectroscopy - Abstract
Arcus is a Medium Explorer (MIDEX) NASA mission to be proposed near the end of 2021. One of the three science goals for Arcus is to explore how stars, circumstellar disks, and exoplanet atmospheres form and evolve. The mission provides high‐resolution, soft X‐ray spectroscopy with required effective area EA=220$$ EA=220 $$ cm2 and resolving power R=2500$$ R=2500 $$. Key science topics discussed here are the structure and heating of stellar coronae across the HR diagram and magnetic accretion onto young stars. These studies will contribute to our understanding of the impact of stellar space weather on exoplanet atmospheres. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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8. On the Weak-Wind Problem in Massive Stars: X-Ray Spectra Reveal a Massive Hot Wind in mu Columbae
- Author
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Huenemoerder, David P, Oskinova, Lidia M, Ignace, Richard, Waldron, Wayne L, Todt, Helge, Hamaguchi, Kenji, and Kitamoto, Shunji
- Subjects
Astronomy - Abstract
Mu Columbae is a prototypical weak-wind O star for which we have obtained a high-resolution X-ray spectrum with the Chandra LETG/ACIS instrument and a low-resolution spectrum with Suzaku. This allows us, for the first time, to investigate the role of X-rays on the wind structure in a bona fide weak-wind system and to determine whether there actually is a massive hot wind. The X-ray emission measure indicates that the outflow is an order of magnitude greater than that derived from UV lines and is commensurate with the nominal wind-luminosity relationship for O stars. Therefore, the "weak-wind problem"--identified from cool wind UV/optical spectra--is largely resolved by accounting for the hot wind seen in X-rays. From X-ray line profiles, Doppler shifts, and relative strengths, we find that this weak-wind star is typical of other late O dwarfs. The X-ray spectra do not suggest a magnetically confined plasma-the spectrum is soft and lines are broadened; Suzaku spectra confirm the lack of emission above 2 keV. Nor do the relative line shifts and widths suggest any wind decoupling by ions. The He-like triplets indicate that the bulk of the X-ray emission is formed rather close to the star, within five stellar radii. Our results challenge the idea that some OB stars are "weak-wind" stars that deviate from the standard wind-luminosity relationship. The wind is not weak, but it is hot and its bulk is only detectable in X-rays.
- Published
- 2012
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9. X-Ray Variation Statistics and Wind Clumping in Vela X-1
- Author
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Furst, Felix, Kreykenbohm, Ingo, Pottschmidt, Katja, Wilms, Joern, Hanke, Manfred, Rothschild, Richard E, Kretschmar, Peter, Schulz, Norbert S, Huenemoerder, David P, Klochkov, Dmitry, and Staubert, Rudiger
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We investigate the structure of the wind in the neutron star X-ray binary system Vela X-1 by analyzing its flaring behavior. Vela X-1 shows constant flaring, with some flares reaching fluxes of more than 3.0 Crab between 20-60 keV for several 100 seconds, while the average flux is around 250 mCrab. We analyzed all archival INTEGRAL data, calculating the brightness distribution in the 20-60 keV band, which, as we show, closely follows a log-normal distribution. Orbital resolved analysis shows that the structure is strongly variable, explainable by shocks and a fluctuating accretion wake. Analysis of RXTE ASM data suggests a strong orbital change of N. Accreted clump masses derived from the INTEGRAL data are on the order of 5 x 10(exp 19)-10(exp 21) g. We show that the lightcurve can be described with a model of multiplicative random numbers. In the course of the simulation we calculate the power spectral density of the system in the 20-100 keV energy band and show that it follows a red-noise power law. We suggest that a mixture of a clumpy wind, shocks, and turbulence can explain the measured mass distribution. As the recently discovered class of supergiant fast X-ray transients (SFXT) seems to show the same parameters for the wind, the link between persistent HMXB like Vela X-1 and SFXT is further strengthened.
- Published
- 2010
10. The Colliding Winds of WR 25 in High-resolution X-Rays.
- Author
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Pradhan, Pragati, Huenemoerder, David P., Ignace, Richard, Pollock, A. M. T., and Nichols, Joy S.
- Subjects
- *
BINARY stars , *X-rays , *WOLF-Rayet stars , *EARLY stars - Abstract
WR 25 is a colliding-wind binary star system comprising a very massive O2.5If*/WN6 primary and an O-star secondary in an eccentric orbit with a 208 day period. These hot stars have strong, highly supersonic winds that interact to form a bright X-ray source from wind-collision shocks whose conditions change with stellar separation. Different views through the winds of Wolf–Rayet and O stars are afforded with orbital phase as the stars move about their orbits, allowing for exploration of wind structure in ways not easy or even possible for single stars. We have analyzed an on-axis Chandra/HETGS spectrum of WR 25 obtained shortly before periastron when the X-rays emanating from the system are the brightest. From the on-axis observations, we constrain the line fluxes, centroids, and widths of various emission lines, including He triplets of Si xiii and Mg xi. We have also been able to include several serendipitous off-axis HETG spectra from the archive and study their flux variation with phase. This is the first report on high-resolution spectral studies of WR 25 in X-rays. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Correlated X-Ray and Optical Variability in the O-type Supergiant ζ Puppis.
- Author
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Nichols, Joy S., Nazé, Yaël, Huenemoerder, David P., Moffat, Anthony F. J., Miller, Nathan A., Lauer, Jennifer, Ignace, Richard, Gayley, Ken, Ramiaramanantsoa, Tahina, Oskinova, Lidia, Hamann, Wolf-Rainer, Richardson, Noel D., Waldron, Wayne L., and Dahmer, Matthew
- Subjects
STARSPOTS ,STELLAR rotation ,X-rays ,X-ray spectra - Abstract
Analysis of the recent long exposure Chandra X-ray observation of the early-type O star ζ Pup shows clear variability with a period previously reported in optical photometric studies. These 813 ks of HETGS observations taken over a roughly one-year time span have two signals of periodic variability: (1) a high-significance period of 1.7820 ± 0.0008 day, and (2) a marginal detection of periodic behavior close to either 5 days or 6 days. A BRITE-Constellation nanosatellite optical photometric monitoring (using near-contemporaneous observations to the Chandra data) confirms a 1.78060 ± 0.00088 day period for this star. The optical period coincides with the new Chandra period within their error ranges, demonstrating a link between these two wave bands and providing a powerful lever for probing the photosphere-wind connection in this star. The phase lag of the X-ray maximum relative to the optical maximum is ∼ ϕ = 0.45, but consideration of secondary maxima in both data sets indicates possibly two "hot" spots on the star with an X-ray phase lag of ϕ = 0.1 each. The details of this periodic variation of the X-rays are probed by displaying a phased and trailed X-ray spectrum and by constructing phased light curves for wavelength bands within the HETGS spectral coverage (ranging down to bands encompassing groups of emission lines). We propose that the 1.78 day period is the stellar rotation period and explore how stellar bright spots and associated corotating interaction regions (CIRs) could explain the modulation of this star's optical and X-ray output and their phase difference. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. A spectroscopic and photometric study of FK Comae in 1989
- Author
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Huenemoerder, David P, Ramsey, Lawrence W, Buzasi, Derek L, and Nations, Harold L
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Results of an observational campaign, coordinated between visual photometry, optical spectroscopy, and UV spectroscopy, to elucidate the characteristics of FK Comae are presented. The photometry showed complicated but systematic behavior. Photospheric absorption lines were distorted by a Doppler-shifted bump caused by dark starspots resulting in small apparent radial velocity variations. No radial velocity variations characteristic of orbital motion were seen to a level of 3 km/s. Broad emission in H-alpha was modulated at the photospheric rotational amplitude, implying an origin no farther from the rotational axis than 1 stellar radius. The strengths of Ca II lines are modulated in phase with H-alpha but do not have velocity-modulated wings like H-alpha.
- Published
- 1993
- Full Text
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13. BF Orionis - Evidence for an infalling circumstellar envelope
- Author
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Welty, Alan D, Barden, Samuel C, Huenemoerder, David P, and Ramsey, Lawrence W
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Analysis of the optical magnitudes and Balmer lines of the Herbig Ae/Be star BF Orionis confirm that the object is an early to mid A-type star, but appears to be below the zero-age main sequence. Enhanced metal-line strengths (once thought to link BF Ori with the Am stars), line asymmetries, and radial velocities are shown to be signatures of an infalling circumstellar envelope. The possibility that BF Ori has a late-type companion is examined, and it is concluded that it does not.
- Published
- 1992
14. Coordinated optical and ultraviolet observations of DH Leo
- Author
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Newmark, Jeffrey S, Buzasi, Derek L, Huenemoerder, David P, Ramsey, Lawrence W, and Barden, Samuel C
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Astrophysics - Abstract
Results are reported from contemporaneous KPNO optical spectroscopy, IUE UV spectroscopy, and KPNO R photometry of the DH Leo triple system in spring 1987. The data are presented in tables, graphs, and spectral phase images and discussed in detail. The H-alpha, H-beta, H-gamma, H-delta, and Ca II H and IRT lines are found to have excess emission, and the phase modulation in H-alpha, H-beta, and Ca II is well correlated with the photometric modulation. This result is attributed to the combination of (1) a small amount of global chromospheric emission and (2) emission from plagelike regions associated with cool starspots. The (H-alpha)/(H-beta) ratio is found to be significantly lower than that in longer-period RS CVn systems.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Coordinated optical and ultraviolet observations of IM Pegasi
- Author
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Huenemoerder, David P, Ramsey, Lawrence W, and Buzasi, Derek L
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
IUE spectra and optical observations of IM Peg obtained during the summers of 1985 and 1986 are analyzed. The modulations of the UV emission lines and the H-alpha, H-beta, and the CaII IR triplet (IRT) optical lines are examined. It is observed that: the UV emissin-line modulation increases as a function of height, H-alpha variability is related to stochastic events, H-beta displays excess absorption relative to a standard star, and the Ca IRT reveals a clear modulation with phase. It is noted that IM Peg corresponds to the solar paradigm used to explain RS CVn activity.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. SHORT-TERM VARIABILITY IN THE RS CANUM VENATICORUM SYSTEM HR 1099
- Author
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BUZASI, DEREK L., HUENEMOERDER, DAVID P., and RAMSEY, LAWRENCE W.
- Published
- 1991
17. The Reduction of Fiber-Fed Echelle Spectrograph Data: Methods and an IDL-Based Solution Procedure
- Author
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Hall, Jeffrey C., Fulton, Eliza E., Huenemoerder, David P., Welty, Alan D., and Neff, James E.
- Published
- 1994
18. OPTICAL AND ULTRAVIOLET ACTIVITY IN RT LACERTAE DURING 1985 AND 1986
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HUENEMOERDER, DAVID P.
- Published
- 1988
19. On X-ray pulsations in beta Cephei-type variables
- Author
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Oskinova, Lida M., Todt, Helge, Huenemoerder, David P., Hubrig, Swetlana, Ignace, Richard, Hamann, Wolf-Rainer (Prof. Dr.), and Balona, Luis
- Subjects
Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Institut für Physik und Astronomie - Abstract
Context. beta Cep-type variables are early B-type stars that are characterized by oscillations observable in their optical light curves. At least one beta Cep-variable also shows periodic variability in X-rays. Aims. Here we study the X-ray light curves in a sample of beta Cep-variables to investigate how common X-ray pulsations are for this type of stars. Methods. We searched the Chandra and XMM-Newton X-ray archives and selected stars that were observed by these telescopes for at least three optical pulsational periods. We retrieved and analyzed the X-ray data for kappa Sco, beta Cru, and alpha Vir. The X-ray light curves of these objects were studied to test for their variability and periodicity. Results. While there is a weak indication for X-ray variability in beta Cru, we find no statistically significant evidence of X-ray pulsations in any of our sample stars. This might be due either to the insufficient data quality or to the physical lack of modulations. New, more sensitive observations should settle this question.
- Published
- 2015
20. TGCat, The Chandra Transmission Grating Catalog and Archive: Systems, Desgin and Accessibility
- Author
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Mitschang, Arik W., Huenemoerder, David P., Nichols, Joy S., MIT Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research, Canizares, Claude, and Huenemoerder, David P.
- Abstract
The recently released Chandra Transmission Grating Catalog and Archive, TGCat, presents a fully dynamic on-line catalog allowing users to browse and categorize Chandra gratings observations quickly and easily, generate custom plots of resulting response corrected spectra on-line without the need for special software and to download analysis ready products from multiple observations in one convenient operation. TGCat has been registered as a VO resource with the NVO providing direct access to the catalogs interface. The catalog is supported by a back-end designed to automatically fetch newly public data, process, archive and catalog them, At the same time utilizing an advanced queue system integrated into the archive's MySQL database allowing large processing projects to take advantage of an unlimited number of CPUs across a network for rapid completion. A unique feature of the catalog is that all of the high level functions used to retrieve inputs from the Chandra archive and to generate the final data products are available to the user in an ISIS written library with detailed documentation. Here we present a structural overview of the Systems, Design, and Accessibility features of the catalog and archive., United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Chandra X-ray Center (CXC) NASA contract NAS8-03060), United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory (SAO) contract SV3-73016 for the Chandra X-Ray Center and Science Instruments)
- Published
- 2009
21. Distribution and Structure of Matter in and around Galaxies
- Author
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Schulz, Norbert S., Allen, Glenn, Bautz, Mark W., Canizares, Claude C., Davis, John, Dewey, Dan, Huenemoerder, David P., Heilmann, Ralf, Houck, John, Marshall, Herman L., Nowak, Mike, Schattenburg, Mark, Bregman, Joel, Diaz-Trigo, Maria, Fang, Taotao, Gagne, Marc, Kallman, Tim, Lautenegger, Maurice, Lee, Julia, Miller, Jon, Mukai, Koji, Parerels, Frits, Pollock, Andy, Rasmussen, Andy, Raymond, John, Smith, Randall, and Yao, Yangsen
- Subjects
High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena (astro-ph.HE) ,Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics (astro-ph.CO) ,Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Understanding the origins and distribution of matter in the Universe is one of the most important quests in physics and astronomy. Themes range from astro-particle physics to chemical evolution in the Galaxy to cosmic nucleosynthesis and chemistry in an anticipation of a full account of matter in the Universe. Studies of chemical evolution in the early Universe will answer questions about when and where the majority of metals were formed, how they spread and why they appar today as they are. The evolution of matter in our Universe cannot be characterized as a simple path of development. In fact the state of matter today tells us that mass and matter is under constant reformation through on-going star formation, nucleosynthesis and mass loss on stellar and galactic scales. X-ray absorption studies have evolved in recent years into powerful means to probe the various phases of interstellar and intergalactic media. Future observatories such as IXO and Gen-X will provide vast new opportunities to study structure and distribution of matter with high resolution X-ray spectra. Specifically the capabilities of the soft energy gratings with a resolution of R=3000 onboard IXO will provide ground breaking determinations of element abundance, ionization structure, and dispersion velocities of the interstellar and intergalactic media of our Galaxy and the Local Group, A White Paper Submitted to the Astro2010 Decadal Survey
- Published
- 2009
22. Structure and Evolution of Pre-Main Sequence Stars
- Author
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Schulz, Norbert S., Allen, Glenn, Bautz, Mark W., Canizares, Claude C., Davis, John, Dewey, Dan, Huenemoerder, David P., Heilmann, Ralf, Houck, John, Marshall, Herman L., Nowak, Mike, Schattenburg, Mark, Audard, Marc, Drake, Jeremy, Gagne, Marc, Kastner, Joel, Kallman, Tim, Lautenegger, Maurice, Lee, Julia, Miller, Jon, Montmerle, Thierry, Mukai, Koji, Osten, Rachel, Parerels, Frits, Pollock, Andy, Preibisch, Thomas, Raymond, John, Reale, Fabio, Smith, Randall, Testa, Paola, and Weintraub, David
- Subjects
High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena (astro-ph.HE) ,Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
Low-mass pre-main sequence (PMS) stars are strong and variable X-ray emitters, as has been well established by EINSTEIN and ROSAT observatories. It was originally believed that this emission was of thermal nature and primarily originated from coronal activity (magnetically confined loops, in analogy with Solar activity) on contracting young stars. Broadband spectral analysis showed that the emission was not isothermal and that elemental abundances were non-Solar. The resolving power of the Chandra and XMM X-ray gratings spectrometers have provided the first, tantalizing details concerning the physical conditions such as temperatures, densities, and abundances that characterize the X-ray emitting regions of young star. These existing high resolution spectrometers, however, simply do not have the effective area to measure diagnostic lines for a large number of PMS stars over required to answer global questions such as: how does magnetic activity in PMS stars differ from that of main sequence stars, how do they evolve, what determines the population structure and activity in stellar clusters, and how does the activity influence the evolution of protostellar disks. Highly resolved (R>3000) X-ray spectroscopy at orders of magnitude greater efficiency than currently available will provide major advances in answering these questions. This requires the ability to resolve the key diagnostic emission lines with a precision of better than 100 km/s., A White Paper Submitted to the Astro2010 Decadal Survey
- Published
- 2009
23. X-ray Variability in the Young Massive Triple theta2 Ori A
- Author
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Schulz, Norbert S., Testa, Paola, Huenemoerder, David P., Ishibashi, Kazunori, and Canizares, Claude R.
- Subjects
Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics (astro-ph) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
Massive stars rarely show intrinsic X-ray variability. The only O-stars credited to be intrinsically variable are theta1 Ori C due to effects from magnetic confinement of its wind, and theta2 Ori A suspected of similar activity. Early Chandra observations have shown that the most massive star system in the Orion Trapezium Cluster, theta2 Ori A, shows rapid variability on time scales of hours. We determine X-ray fluxes and find that the star shows very strong variability over the last 5 years. We observed a second large X-ray outburst in November 2004 with the high resolution transmission grating spectrometer on-board Chandra. In the low state X-ray emissivities indicate temperatures well above 25 MK. In the high state we find an extended emissivity distribution with high emissivities in the range from 3 MK to over 100 MK. The outburst event in stellar terms is one of the most powerful ever observed and the most energetic one in the ONC with a lower total energy limit of 1.5x10^37 ergs. The line diagnostics show that under the assumption that the line emitting regions in the low states are as close as within 1 -- 2 stellar radii from the O-star's photosphere, whereas the hard states suggest a distance of 3 -- 5 stellar radii. The two outbursts are very close to the periastron passage of the stars. We argue that the high X-ray states are possibly the result of reconnection events from magnetic interactions of the primary and secondary stars of the spectroscopic binary. Effects from wind collisions seem unlikely for this system. The low state emissivity and R-ratios strengthen the predicament that the X-ray emission is enhanced by magnetic confinement of the primary wind. We also detect Fe fluorescence indicative of the existence of substantial amounts of neutral Fe in the vicinity of the X-ray emission., 11 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Main Journal
- Published
- 2006
24. HETGS Spectroscopy of a Coronally Active Contact Binary, VW Cep
- Author
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Huenemoerder, David P. and Hunacek, Adrienne
- Subjects
Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics (astro-ph) ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
Short-period binaries represent extreme cases in the generation of stellar coronae via a rotational dynamo. Such stars are important for probing the origin and nature of coronae in the regimes of rapid rotation and activity saturation. VW Cep (P=0.28 d) is relatively bright, partially eclipsing, and very active object. We present preliminary results from Chandra X-ray spectroscopy with the High Energy Transmission Grating. Light curves show flaring and rotational modulation, but no strong eclipses. Emission lines are broader than instrumental, indicating emission from both binary components. Velocity modulation of emission lines is indicative of geometric structure of the emitting plasma. The emission measure shows a broad range of temperatures and strong peak., 4 pages, 5 figures; to appear in "Proc. 13th Cambridge Workshop on Cool Stars, Stellar Systems, and the Sun", Hamburg (Germany), 5-9 July 2004, F.Favata et al., eds. (ESA-SP, in press)
- Published
- 2004
25. The Coronae of AR Lac
- Author
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Huenemoerder, David P., Canizares, Claude R., Drake, Jeremy J., and Sanz-Forcada, Jorge
- Subjects
Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Physics::Space Physics ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Earth and Planetary Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Abstract
We observed the coronally active eclipsing binary, AR Lac, with the High Energy Transmission Grating on Chandra for a total of 97 ks, spaced over five orbits, at quadratures and conjunctions. Contemporaneous and simultaneous EUV spectra and photometry were also obtained with the Extreme Ultraviolet Explorer. Significant variability in both X-ray and EUV fluxes were observed, dominated by at least one X-ray flare and one EUV flare. We saw no evidence of primary or secondary eclipses. X-ray flux modulation was largest at high temperature, indicative of flare heating of coronal plasma. Line widths interpreted in terms of Doppler broadening suggest that both binary stellar components are active. From line fluxes obtained from total integrated spectra, we have modeled the emission measure and abundance distributions. A strong maximum was found in the differential emission measure, characterized by peaks at log T = 6.9 and 7.4, together with a weak but significant cooler maximum near log T=6.2, and a moderately strong hot tail from log T= 7.6-8.2. Coronal abundances have a broad distribution and show no simple correlation with first ionization potential. While the resulting model spectrum generally agrees very well with the observed spectrum, there are some significant discrepancies, especially among the many Fe L-lines. Both the emission measure and abundance distributions are qualitatively similar to prior determinations from other X-ray and ultraviolet spectra, indicating some long-term stability in the overall coronal structure., Comment: 31 pages, 8 figures, 3 tables; Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal (tentatively October 1, 2003)
- Published
- 2003
26. A flare event of the long-period RS Canum Venaticorum system IM Pegasi
- Author
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Buzasi, Derek L, Ramsey, Lawrence W, and Huenemoerder, David P
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
The characteristics of a flare event detected on the long-period RS CVn system IM Pegasi are reported. The low-resolution spectrum show enhancements of up to a factor of five in some emission lines. All of the ultraviolet emission lines normally visible are enhanced significantly more than the normal 30 rotational modulation. Emission fluxes of both the quiescent and flare event are used to construct models of the density and temperature variation with height. These models reveal a downward shift of the transition region during the flare. Scaled models of the quiet and flaring solar outer atmosphere are used to estimate the filling factor of the flare event at about 30 percent of the stellar surface. The pattern of line enhancements in the flare is the same as a previous event in Lambda Andromeda observed previously.
- Published
- 1987
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Development of a critical-angle transmission grating spectrometer for the International X-Ray Observatory.
- Author
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Heilmann, Ralf K., Ahn, Minseung, Bautz, Marshall W., Foster, Richard, Huenemoerder, David P., Marshall, Herman L., Mukherjee, Pran, Schattenburg, Mark L., Schulz, Norbert S., and Smith, Matthew
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Polar Exploration and Coronal Structure in the Active Binary HR 5110.
- Author
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Huenemoerder, David P., Osten, Rachel A., Kesich, Anthony, Testa, Paola, and Schulz, Norbert
- Subjects
- *
BINARY stars , *ASTRONOMICAL observations , *ELECTRONS , *ESTIMATION theory , *PLASMA gases - Abstract
Overwhelming evidence exists for the importance of polar regions in controlling stellar atmospheric structure and dynamics in active binary systems. Uncertainties about the geometry of coronal emission have made conclusions about coronal structures on such stars ambiguous. We have obtained Chandra, VLA and VLBA observations of the nearly pole-on active binary system HR 5110 in order to investigate coronal structures without such ambiguity. The X-ray spectra will constrain thermal coronal volumes through determinaion of electron densities; radio observations will constrain non-thermal coronal volumes directly, and allow an estimation of the relative importance of thermal and nonthermal plasma in controlling and structuring active stellar coronae. Here we present preliminary results from the Chandra observations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. CIAO: Chandra's data analysis system.
- Author
-
Fruscione, Antonella, McDowell, Jonathan C., Allen, Glenn E., Brickhouse, Nancy S., Burke, Douglas J., Davis, John E., Durham, Nick, Elvis, Martin, Galle, Elizabeth C., Harris, Daniel E., Huenemoerder, David P., Houck, John C., Ishibashi, Bish, Karovska, Margarita, Nicastro, Fabrizio, Noble, Michael S., Nowak, Michael A., Primini, Frank A., Siemiginowska, Aneta, and Smith, Randall K.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. A 33 yr CONSTANCY OF THE X-RAY CORONAE OF AR Lac AND ECLIPSE DIAGNOSIS OF SCALE HEIGHT.
- Author
-
Drake, Jeremy J., Ratzlaff, Peter, Kashyap, Vinay, Huenemoerder, David P., Wargelin, Bradford J., and Pease, Deron O.
- Subjects
ECLIPSING binaries ,STELLAR corona ,ECLIPSES ,ULTRAVIOLET photometry ,ASTRONOMICAL photometry ,SOLAR flares ,G stars ,LIGHT curves - Abstract
Extensive X-ray and EUV photometric observations of the eclipsing RS CVn system AR Lac were obtained over the years 1997-2013 with the Chandra X-Ray ObservatoryExtreme-Ultraviolet Explorer (EUVE). During primary eclipse, High Resolution Camera count rates decrease by ∼40%. A similar minimum is seen during one primary eclipse observed by EUVE but not in others owing to intrinsic source variability. Little evidence for secondary eclipses is present in either the X-ray or EUV data, reminiscent of earlier X-ray and EUV observations. Primary eclipses allow us to estimate the extent of a spherically symmetric corona on the primary G star of about 1.3 R
☼ , or 0.86 R⋆ , and indicate that the G star is likely brighter than the K component by a factor of 2-5. Brightness changes not attributable to eclipses appear to be dominated by stochastic variability and are generally non-repeating. X-ray and EUV light curves cannot therefore be reliably used to reconstruct the spatial distribution of emission assuming that only eclipses and rotational modulation are at work. Moderate flaring is observed, where count rates increase by up to a factor of three above quiescence. Combined with older ASCA, Einstein, EXOSAT, ROSAT, and BeppoSAX observations, the data show that the level of quiescent coronal emission at X-ray wavelengths has remained remarkably constant over 33 yr, with no sign of variation due to magnetic cycles. Variations in base level X-ray emission seen by Chandra over 13 yr are only ∼10%, while variations back to pioneering Einstein observations in 1980 amount to a maximum of 45% and more typically about 15%. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. STELLAR CORONAE, SOLAR FLARES: A DETAILED COMPARISON OF σ GEM, HR1099, AND THE SUN IN HIGH-RESOLUTION X-RAYS.
- Author
-
HUENEMOERDER, DAVID P., PHILLIPS, KENNETH J. H., SYLWESTER, JANUSZ, and SYLWESTER, BARBARA
- Subjects
- *
SOLAR corona , *SOLAR atmosphere , *SOLAR flares , *X-rays , *BINARY systems (Astronomy) - Abstract
The Chandra High Energy Transmission Grating Spectrometer (HETG) spectra of the coronally active binary stars σ Gem and HR1099 are among the highest fluence observations for such systems taken at high spectral resolution in X-rays with this instrument. This allows us to compare their properties in detail to solar flare spectra obtained with the Russian CORONAS-F spacecraft's RESIK instrument at similar resolution in an overlapping bandpass. Here we emphasize the detailed comparisons of the 3.3-6.1Å region (including emission from highly ionized S, Si, Ar, and K) from solar flare spectra to the corresponding σ Gem and HR1099 spectra. We also model the larger wavelength range of the HETG, from 1.7 to 25Å--having emission lines from Fe, Ca, Ar, Si, Al, Mg, Ne, O, and N--to determine coronal temperatures and abundances. σ Gem is a single-lined coronally active long-period binary which has a very hot corona. HR1099 is a similar, but shorter period, double-lined system. With very deep HETG exposures we can even study emission from some of the weaker species, such as K, Na, and Al, which are important since they have the lowest first ionization potentials, a parameter well known to be correlated with elemental fractionation in the solar corona. The solar flare temperatures reach ≈20 MK, comparable to the σ Gem and HR1099 coronae. During the Chandra exposures, σ Gem was slowly decaying from a flare and its spectrum is well characterized by a collisional ionization equilibrium plasma with a broad temperature distribution ranging from 2 to 60MK, peaking near 25 MK, but with substantial emission from 50MKplasma.We have detected Kxviii and Na xi emission which allow us to set limits on their abundances. HR1099 was also quite variable in X-rays, also in a flare state, but had no detectable Kxviii. These measurements provide new comparisons of solar and stellar coronal abundances, especially at the lowest first ionization potential (FIP) values. The low FIP elements do not show enhancement in the stellar coronae as they do in the Sun, except perhaps for K in σ Gem. While σ Gem and HR1099 differ in their emission measure distributions, they have very similar elemental abundances. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. DETAILED X-RAY LINE PROPERTIES OF θ2 Ori A IN QUIESCENCE.
- Author
-
MITSCHANG, ARIK W., SCHULZ, NORBERT S., HUENEMOERDER, DAVID P., NICHOLS, JOY S., and TESTA, PAOLA
- Subjects
STARS ,OXYGEN ,ULTRAVIOLET radiation ,NEON ,MAGNESIUM - Abstract
We investigate X-ray emission properties of the peculiar X-ray source θ
2 On A in the Orion Trapezium region using more than 500 ks of HETGS spectral data in the quiescent state. The amount of exposure provides tight constraints on several important diagnostics involving O, Ne, Mg, and Si line flux ratios from He-like ion triplets, resonance line ratios of the H- and He-like lines, and line widths. Accounting for the influence of the strong UV radiation field of the 09.5V star, we can now place the He-like line origin well within two stellar radii of the O-star's surface. The lines are resolved with average line widths of 341 ± 38 km s-1 . In the framework of standard wind models, this likely implies a rather weak wind with moderate post-shock velocities. The emission measure distribution of the X-ray spectrum, as reported previously, includes very high temperature components which are not easily explained in this framework. The X-ray properties are also not consistent with coronal emissions from an unseen low-mass companion nor with typical signatures from colliding wind interactions. The properties are more consistent with X-ray signatures observed in the massive Trapezium star θ1 On C which has recently been successfully modeled with a magnetically confined wind model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. X-RAY FLARES OF EV Lac: STATISTICS, SPECTRA, AND DIAGNOSTICS.
- Author
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Huenemoerder, David P., Schulz, Norbert S., Testa, Paola, Drake, Jeremy J., Osten, Rachel A., and Reale, Fabio
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Chandra X-ray Observatory high-resolution x-ray spectroscopy of stars: Modeling and interpretation.
- Author
-
Huenemoerder, David P.
- Subjects
- *
STELLAR spectra , *X-ray spectroscopy , *OBSERVATORIES , *IONIZATION (Atomic physics) , *MATHEMATICAL continuum , *SPECTROMETERS - Abstract
The Chandra X-ray Observatory grating spectrometers allow study of stellar spectra at resolutions on the order of 1000. Prior x-ray observatories' low resolution data have shown that nearly all classes of stars emit x rays. Chandra reveals details of line and continuum contributions to the spectra which can be interpreted through application of plasma models based on atomic databases. For cool stars with hot coronas interpreted in the solar paradigm, assumption of collisional ionization equilibrium allows derivation of temperature distributions and elemental abundances. Densities can be derived from He-like ion's metastable transition lines. Abundance trends are unlike the Sun, as are the very hot temperature distributions. For young stars, there is evidence of accretion driven x-ray emission, rather than magnetically confined plasma emission. For some hot stars, the expected emission mechanism of shocked winds has been challenged; there is now evidence for magnetically confined thermal plasmas. The helium-like line emission in hot stars is susceptible to photoexcitation, which can also be exploited to derive wind structure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Chandra, EUVE, HST, and VLA Multiwavelength Campaign on HR 1099: Instrumental Capabilities, Data Reduction, and Initial Results.
- Author
-
Ayres, Thomas R., Brown, Alexander, Osten, Rachel A., Huenemoerder, David P., Drake, Jeremy J., Brickhouse, Nancy S., and Linsky, Jeffrey L.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. ERRATUM: “STELLAR CORONAE, SOLAR FLARES: A DETAILED COMPARISON OF σ Gem, HR 1099, AND THE SUN IN HIGH-RESOLUTION X-RAYS” (2013, ApJ, 768, 135).
- Author
-
Huenemoerder, David P., Phillips, Kenneth J. H., Sylwester, Janusz, and Sylwester, Barbara
- Subjects
- *
STELLAR corona , *SOLAR flares - Abstract
A correction to the article "Stellar Coronae, Solar Flares: A Detailed Comparison of σ Gem, HR 1099, and the Sun in High-Resolution X-Rays," by David P. Huenemoerder and colleagues published in the October 7, 2013 issue is presented.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Discovery of X-ray pulsations from a massive star.
- Author
-
Oskinova, Lidia M., Nazé, Yael, Todt, Helge, Huenemoerder, David P., Ignace, Richard, Hubrig, Swetlana, and Hamann, Wolf-Rainer
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. X-RAY EMISSION AND CORONA OF THE YOUNG INTERMEDIATE-MASS BINARY θ1 Ori E.
- Author
-
Huenemoerder, David P., Schulz, Norbert S., Testa, Paola, Kesich, Anthony, and Canizares, Claude R.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. X-Ray Emission from Young Stellar Objects in the ε Chamaeleontis Group: The Herbig Ae Star HD 104237 and Associated Low-Mass Stars.
- Author
-
Testa, Paola, Huenemoerder, David P., Schulz, Norbert S., and Ishibashi, Kazunori
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Geometry Diagnostics of a Stellar Flare from Fluorescent X-Rays.
- Author
-
Testa, Paola, Drake, Jeremy J., Ercolano, Barbara, Reale, Fabio, Huenemoerder, David P., Affer, Laura, Micela, Giuseppina, and Garcia-Alvarez, David
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. On X-Ray Optical Depth in the Coronae of Active Stars.
- Author
-
Testa, Paola, Drake, Jeremy J., Peres, Giovanni, and Huenemoerder, David P.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Detailed Diagnostics of an X-Ray Flare in the Single Giant HR 9024.
- Author
-
Testa, Paola, Reale, Fabio, Garcia-Alvarez, David, and Huenemoerder, David P.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. X-Ray Variability in the Young Massive Triple θ2 Orionis A.
- Author
-
Schulz, Norbert S., Testa, Paola, Huenemoerder, David P., Ishibashi, Kazunori, and Canizares, Claude R.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Chandra/HETGS Observations of the Capella System: The Primary as a Dominating X-Ray Source.
- Author
-
Ishibashi, Kazunori, Dewey, Daniel, Huenemoerder, David P., and Testa, Paola
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. The Coronal X-Ray Spectrum of the Multiple Weak-lined T Tauri Star System HD 98800.
- Author
-
Kastner, Joel H., Huenemoerder, David P., Schulz, Norbert S., Canizares, Claude R., Li, Jingqiang, and Weintraub, David A.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Variation in Emission and Absorption Lines and Continuum Flux by Orbital Phase in Vela X-1.
- Author
-
Goldstein, Greg, Huenemoerder, David P., and Blank, David
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Enhanced Noble Gases in the Coronae of Active Stars.
- Author
-
Drake, Jeremy J., Brickhouse, Nancy S., Kashyap, Vinay, Laming, J. Martin, Huenemoerder, David P., Smith, Randall, and Wargelin, Bradford J.
- Published
- 2001
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. X-Ray Spectroscopy of the Nearby, Classical T Tauri Star TW Hydrae.
- Author
-
Kastner, Joel H., Huenemoerder, David P., Schulz, Norbert S., and Weintraub, David A.
- Published
- 1999
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. On X-ray Optical Depth in the Coronae of Active Stars
- Author
-
Jeremy J. Drake, David P. Huenemoerder, Giovanni Peres, Paola Testa, TESTA PAOLA, DRAKE JEREMY J, PERES G, and HUENEMOERDER DAVID P
- Subjects
Physics ,Lyman series ,Astrophysics (astro-ph) ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Flux ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Radius ,Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,radiative transfer — stars: coronae — stars: late-type — X-rays: stars ,Spectral line ,symbols.namesake ,Stars ,Neon ,chemistry ,Space and Planetary Science ,symbols ,Astrophysics::Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Optical depth ,Line (formation) - Abstract
We have investigated the optical thickness of the coronal plasma through the analysis of high-resolution X-ray spectra of a large sample of active stars observed with the High Energy Transmission Grating Spectrometer on Chandra. In particular, we probed for the presence of significant resonant scattering in the strong Lyman series lines arising from hydrogen-like oxygen and neon ions. The active RS CVn-type binaries II Peg and IM Peg and the single M dwarf EV Lac show significant optical depth. For these active coronae, the Lya/Lyb ratios are significantly depleted as compared with theoretical predictions and with the same ratios observed in similar active stars. Interpreting these decrements in terms of resonance scattering of line photons out of the line-of-sight, we are able to derive an estimate for the typical size of coronal structures, and from these we also derive estimates of coronal filling factors. For all three sources we find that the both the photon path length as a fraction of the stellar radius, and the implied surface filling factors are very small and amount to a few percent at most. The measured Lya/Lyb ratios are in good agreement with APED theoretical predictions, thus indicating negligible optical depth, for the other sources in our sample. We discuss the implications for coronal structuring and heating flux requirements. For the stellar sample as a whole, the data suggest increasing quenching of Lya relative to Lyb as function of both L_x/L_bol and the density-sensitive MgXI forbidden to intercombination line ratio, as might generally be expected., Accepted for publication on the Astrophysical Journal
- Published
- 2007
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