361 results on '"Chesneau, Olivier"'
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2. Synthetic group A streptogramin antibiotics that overcome Vat resistance.
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Li, Qi, Pellegrino, Jenna, Lee, D John, Tran, Arthur A, Chaires, Hector A, Wang, Ruoxi, Park, Jesslyn E, Ji, Kaijie, Chow, David, Zhang, Na, Brilot, Axel F, Biel, Justin T, van Zundert, Gydo, Borrelli, Kenneth, Shinabarger, Dean, Wolfe, Cindy, Murray, Beverly, Jacobson, Matthew P, Mühle, Estelle, Chesneau, Olivier, Fraser, James S, and Seiple, Ian B
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Ribosomes ,Animals ,Mice ,Staphylococcus aureus ,Streptogramin Group A ,Virginiamycin ,Acetyltransferases ,RNA ,Transfer ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Cryoelectron Microscopy ,Microbial Sensitivity Tests ,Drug Resistance ,Bacterial ,Binding Sites ,Acetylation ,Drug Design ,Models ,Molecular ,Female ,Bacterial Load ,In Vitro Techniques ,RNA ,Transfer ,Drug Resistance ,Bacterial ,Models ,Molecular ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
Natural products serve as chemical blueprints for most antibiotics in clinical use. The evolutionary process by which these molecules arise is inherently accompanied by the co-evolution of resistance mechanisms that shorten the clinical lifetime of any given class of antibiotics1. Virginiamycin acetyltransferase (Vat) enzymes are resistance proteins that provide protection against streptogramins2, potent antibiotics against Gram-positive bacteria that inhibit the bacterial ribosome3. Owing to the challenge of selectively modifying the chemically complex, 23-membered macrocyclic scaffold of group A streptogramins, analogues that overcome the resistance conferred by Vat enzymes have not been previously developed2. Here we report the design, synthesis, and antibacterial evaluation of group A streptogramin antibiotics with extensive structural variability. Using cryo-electron microscopy and forcefield-based refinement, we characterize the binding of eight analogues to the bacterial ribosome at high resolution, revealing binding interactions that extend into the peptidyl tRNA-binding site and towards synergistic binders that occupy the nascent peptide exit tunnel. One of these analogues has excellent activity against several streptogramin-resistant strains of Staphylococcus aureus, exhibits decreased rates of acetylation in vitro, and is effective at lowering bacterial load in a mouse model of infection. Our results demonstrate that the combination of rational design and modular chemical synthesis can revitalize classes of antibiotics that are limited by naturally arising resistance mechanisms.
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- 2020
3. Clarification on the implementation of the Nagoya Protocol in France for the access and sharing of benefits arising from the utilization of microbial genetic resources
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Ferrari, Mariana L., primary, Chesneau, Olivier, additional, Clermont, Dominique, additional, Rahi, Praveen, additional, Mistou, Michel-Yves, additional, Portier, Perrine, additional, and Betsou, Fay, additional
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- 2024
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4. Image modeling of compact starburst clusters: I. R136
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Khorrami, Zeinab, Vakili, Farrokh, and Chesneau, Olivier
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Continuous progress in data quality from HST, recent multiwavelength high resolution spectroscopy and high contrast imaging from ground adaptive optics on large telescopes need modeling of R136 to understand its nature and evolutionary stage. To produce the best synthesized multiwavelength images of R136 we need to simulate the effect of dynamical and stellar evolution, mass segregation and binary stars fraction on the survival of young massive clusters with the initial parameters of R136 in the LMC, being set to the present knowledge of this famous cluster. We produced a series of 32 young massive clusters using the NBODY6 code. Each cluster was tracked with adequate temporal samples to follow the evolution of R136 during its early stages. To compare the NBODY6 simulations with observational data, we created the synthetic images from the output of the code. We used the TLUSTY and KURUCZ model atmospheres to produce the fluxes in HST/ WFPC2 filters. GENEVA isochrones were used to track the evolution of stars. Then, we derived the observable parameters from synthetic scenes at the spatial resolution of HST/WFPC2 in the F814W filter (790.48nm). Surface brightness profile of the cluster, half-light radius, mass function and neighbor radius were used to select the best representation of R136. We compared the simulations of R136 to its HST imagery by creating synthetic scenes at the same resolution, pixel scale and FOV of the HST. We applied the same photometric analysis of the images as of the real ones. Having extracted the stellar sources, we estimated the mass-function, the surface brightness profile, the half-light radius and the neighbor radius across R136. The interpretation of these criteria point to the fact that an initially non-segregated cluster scenario is more representative of R136. This result pleads for the formation of massive stars by accretion instead of collision., Comment: 18 pages, 40 figures
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- 2016
5. Pseudomagnitudes and Differential Surface Brightness: Application to the apparent diameter of stars
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Chelli, Alain, Duvert, Gilles, Bourgès, Laurent, Mella, Guillaume, Lafrasse, Sylvain, Bonneau, Daniel, and Chesneau, Olivier
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The diameter of a star is a major observable that serves to test the validity of stellar structure theories. It is also a difficult observable that is mostly obtained with indirect methods since the stars are so remote. Today only ~600 apparent star diameters have been measured by direct methods: optical interferometry and lunar occultations. Accurate star diameters are now required in the new field of exoplanet studies, since they condition the planets' sizes in transit observations, and recent publications illustrate a visible renewal of interest in this topic. Our analysis is based on the modeling of the relationship between measured angular diameters and photometries. It makes use of two new reddening-free concepts: a distance indicator called pseudomagnitude, and a quasi-experimental observable that is independent of distance and specific to each star, called the differential surface brightness (DSB). The use of all the published measurements of apparent diameters that have been collected so far, and a careful modeling of the DSB allow us to estimate star diameters with a median statistical error of 1%, knowing their spectral type and, in the present case, the VJHKs photometries. We introduce two catalogs, the JMMC Measured Diameters Catalog (JMDC), containing measured star diameters, and the second version of the JMMC Stellar Diameter Catalog (JSDC), augmented to about 453000 star diameters. Finally, we provide simple formulas and a table of coefficients to quickly estimate stellar angular diameters and associated errors from (V, Ks) magnitudes and spectral types., Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, 2 tables + tables electronically available on http://www.jmmc.fr/jmdc and http://www.jmmc.fr/jsdc
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- 2016
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6. Observations of binaries in AGB, post-AGB stars and Planetary Nebulae
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Lagadec, Eric and Chesneau, Olivier
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
During the last years, many observational studies have revealed that binaries play an active role in the shaping of non spherical planetary nebulae. We review the different works that lead to the direct or indirect evidence for the presence of binary companions during the Asymptotic Giant Branch, proto-Planetary Nebula and Planetary Nebula phases. We also discuss how these binaries can influence the stellar evolution and possible future directions in the field., Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, invited Review at the conference "Why Galaxies Care about AGB stars III"
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- 2014
7. The RCB star V854 Cen is surrounded by a hot dusty shell
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Chesneau, Olivier, Millour, Florentin, De Marco, Orsola, Bright, S. N., Spang, Alain, Lagadec, Eric, Mékarnia, Djamel, and de Wit, W. J.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Aims : The hydrogen-deficient supergiants known as R Coronae Borealis (RCB) stars might be the result of a double-degenerate merger of two white dwarfs (WDs), or a final helium shell flash in a planetary nebula central star. In this context, any information on the geometry of their circumstellar environment and, in particular, the potential detection of elongated structures, is of great importance. Methods : We obtained near-IR observations of V854 Cen with the AMBER recombiner located at the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) array with the compact array (B$\leq$35m) in 2013 and the long array (B$\leq$140m) in 2014. At each time, V854 Cen was at maximum light. The $H$- and $K$-band continua were investigated by means of spectrally dependant geometric models. These data were supplemented with mid-IR VISIR/VLT images. Results : A dusty slightly elongated over density is discovered both in the $H$- and $K$-band images. With the compact array, the central star is unresolved ($\Theta\leq2.5$\,mas), but a flattened dusty environment of $8 \times 11$ mas is discovered whose flux increases from about $\sim$20% in the $H$ band to reach about $\sim$50% at 2.3$\micron$, which indicates hot (T$\sim$1500\,K) dust in the close vicinity of the star. The major axis is oriented at a position angle (P.A.) of 126$\pm$29$\deg$. Adding the long-array configuration dataset provides tighter constraints on the star diameter ($\Theta\leq1.0$ mas), a slight increase of the overdensity to $12 \times 15$ mas and a consistent P.A. of 133$\pm$49$\deg$. The closure phases, sensitive to asymmetries, are null and compatible with a centro-symmetric, unperturbed environment excluding point sources at the level of 3% of the total flux in 2013 and 2014. The VISIR images exhibit a flattened aspect ratio at the 15-20% level at larger distances ($\sim$1$\arcsec$) with a position angle of 92$\pm$19$\deg$, marginally consistent with the interferometric observations. Conclusions : This is the first time that a moderately elongated structure has been observed around an RCB star. These observations confirm the numerous suggestions for a bipolar structure proposed for this star in the literature, which were mainly based on polarimetric and spectroscopic observations., Comment: Accepted by A\&A, new version after language editing, Astronomy and Astrophysics (2014)
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- 2014
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8. V838 Monocerotis: the central star and its environment a decade after outburst
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Chesneau, Olivier, Millour, Florentin, De Marco, Orsola, Bright, S. N., Spang, Alain, Banerjee, D. P. K., Ashok, N. M., Kaminski, T., Wisniewski, John P., Meilland, Anthony, and Lagadec, Eric
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Aims. V838 Monocerotis erupted in 2002, brightened in a series of outbursts, and eventually developed a spectacular light echo. A very red star emerged a few months after the outburst. The whole event has been interpreted as the result of a merger. Methods. We obtained near-IR and mid-IR interferometric observations of V838 Mon with the AMBER and MIDI recombiners located at the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) array. The MIDI two-beam observations were obtained with the 8m Unit Telescopes between October 2011 and February 2012. The AMBER three-beam observations were obtained with the compact array (B$\leq$m) in April 2013 and the long array (B$\leq$140m) in May 2014, using the 1.8m Auxiliary Telescopes. Results. A significant new result is the detection of a compact structure around V838 Mon, as seen from MIDI data. The extension of the structure increases from a FWHM of 25 mas at 8 {\mu}m to 70 mas at 13 {\mu}m. At the adopted distance of D = 6.1 $\pm$ 0.6 kpc, the dust is distributed from about 150 to 400 AU around V838 Mon. The MIDI visibilities reveal a flattened structure whose aspect ratio increases with wavelength. The major axis is roughly oriented around a position angle of -10 degrees, which aligns with previous polarimetric studies reported in the literature. This flattening can be interpreted as a relic of the 2002 eruption or by the influence of the currently embedded B3V companion. The AMBER data provide a new diameter for the pseudo-photosphere, which shows that its diameter has decreased by about 40% in 10yrs, reaching a radius R$_*$ = 750 $\pm$ 200 R$_{\odot}$ (3.5 $\pm$ 1.0 AU). Conclusions. After the 2002 eruption, interpreted as the merging of two stars, it seems that the resulting source is relaxing to a normal state. The nearby environment exhibits an equatorial over-density of dust up to several hundreds of AU., Comment: Astronomy and Astrophysics (2014) Will be set by the publisher
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- 2014
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9. Optical interferometry and adaptive optics of bright transients
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Millour, Florentin, Chesneau, Olivier, Meilland, Anthony, and Nardetto, Nicolas
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Bright optical transients (i.e. transients typically visible with the naked eye) are populated mainly by novae eruptions plus a few supernovae (among which the SN1987a event). One bright nova happen every two years, either in the North ot in the South hemisphere. It occurs that current interferometers have matching sensitivities, with typically visible or infrared limiting magnitude in the range 5--7. The temporal development of the fireball, followed by a dust formation phase or the appearance of many coronal lines can be sudied with the Very Large Telescope Interferometer. The detailed geometry of the first phases of novae in outburst remains virtually unexplored. This paper summarizes the work which has been done to date using the VLTI., Comment: Hot-wiring the transien Universe 3, Santa Fe : United States (2013)
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- 2014
10. An edge-on translucent dust disk around the nearest AGB star L2 Puppis - VLT/NACO spectro-imaging from 1.04 to 4.05 microns and VLTI interferometry
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Kervella, Pierre, Montargès, Miguel, Ridgway, Stephen T., Perrin, Guy, Chesneau, Olivier, Lacour, Sylvestre, Chiavassa, Andrea, Haubois, Xavier, and Gallenne, Alexandre
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
As the nearest known AGB star (d=64pc) and one of the brightest (mK-2), L2 Pup is a particularly interesting benchmark object to monitor the final stages of stellar evolution. We report new lucky imaging observations of this star with the VLT/NACO adaptive optics system in twelve narrow band filters covering the 1.0-4.0 microns wavelength range. These diffraction limited images reveal an extended circumstellar dust lane in front of the star, that exhibits a high opacity in the J band and becomes translucent in the H and K bands. In the L band, extended thermal emission from the dust is detected. We reproduce these observations using Monte-Carlo radiative transfer modeling of a dust disk with the RADMC-3D code. We also present new interferometric observations with the VLTI/VINCI and MIDI instruments. We measure in the K band an upper limit to the limb-darkened angular diameter of theta_LD = 17.9 +/- 1.6 mas, converting to a maximum linear radius of R = 123 +/- 14 Rsun. Considering the geometry of the extended K band emission in the NACO images, this upper limit is probably close to the actual angular diameter of the star. The position of L2 Pup in the Herzsprung-Russell diagram indicates that this star has a mass around 2 Msun and is probably experiencing an early stage of the asymptotic giant branch. We do not detect any stellar companion of L2 Pup in our adaptive optics and interferometric observations, and we attribute its apparent astrometric wobble in the Hipparcos data to variable lighting effects on its circumstellar material. We however do not exclude the presence of a binary companion, as the large loop structure extending to more than 10 AU to the North-East of the disk in our L band images may be the result of interaction between the stellar wind of L2 Pup and a hidden secondary object. The geometric configuration that we propose, with a large dust disk seen almost edge-on, appears particularly favorable to test and develop our understanding of the formation of bipolar nebulae., Comment: 16 pages, 15 figures
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- 2014
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11. SPIDAST: a new modular software to process spectro-interferometric measurements
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Cruzalèbes, Pierre, Rabbia, Yves, Jorissen, Alain, Spang, Alain, Sacuto, Stéphane, Pasquato, Ester, Chiavassa, Andrea, Chesneau, Olivier, and Fréville, Patrick
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Extracting stellar fundamental parameters from SPectro-Interferometric (SPI) data requires reliable estimates of observables and with robust uncertainties (visibility, triple product, phase closure). A number of fine calibration procedures is necessary throughout the reduction process. Testing departures from centro-symmetry of brightness distributions is a useful complement. Developing a set of automatic routines, called SPIDAST (made available to the community) to reduce, calibrate and interpret raw data sets of instantaneous spectro-interferograms at the spectral channel level, we complement (and in some respects improve) the ones contained in the amdlib Data Reduction Software. Our new software SPIDAST is designed to work in an automatic mode, free from subjective choices, while being versatile enough to suit various processing strategies. SPIDAST performs the following automated operations: weighting of non-aberrant SPI data (visibility, triple product), fine spectral calibration (sub-pixel level), accurate and robust determinations of stellar diameters for calibrator sources (and their uncertainties as well), correction for the degradations of the interferometer response in visibility and triple product, calculation of the Centro-Symmetry Parameter (CSP) from the calibrated triple product, fit of parametric chromatic models on SPI observables, to extract model parameters. SPIDAST is currently applied to the scientific study of 18 cool giant and supergiant stars, observed with the VLTI/AMBER facility at medium resolution in the K band. Because part of their calibrators have no diameter in the current catalogs, SPIDAST provides new determinations of the angular diameters of all calibrators. Comparison of SPIDAST final calibrated observables with amdlib determinations shows good agreement, under good and poor seeing conditions., Comment: 14 pages, 15 figures, 3 tables
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- 2013
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12. ABC-F proteins in mRNA translation and antibiotic resistance
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Ousalem, Farès, Singh, Shikha, Chesneau, Olivier, Hunt, John F., and Boël, Grégory
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- 2019
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13. Interferometric studies of novae in the infrared
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Chesneau, Olivier and Banerjee, D. P. K.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The Interferometric studies of novae in the optical and near-infrared is a nascent but fast emerging field which has begun to provide new and invaluable insights into the nova phenomenon. This is particularly so in the early stages of the eruption when all the relevant physical phenomena are on the scale of milli-arcseconds and thus are amenable to be studied only by interferometric techniques. In this review the instruments and arrays involved in this domain of work are briefly described, followed by a description of the major results obtained so far. A discussion is made of the physical aspects, where the application of interferometric techniques, can bring the most valuable information. Finally, prospects for the near future are discussed., Comment: Bulletin of Astronomical Society of India (2012) 1
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- 2012
14. Stars with the B[e] phenomenon seen by long baseline interferometry
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Fernandes, Marcelo Borges, Chesneau, Olivier, Kraus, Michaela, Cidale, Lydia, Meilland, Anthony, Bendjoya, Philippe, de Souza, Armando Domiciano, Niccolini, Gilles, Andruchow, Ileana, Kanaan, Samer, Stee, Philippe, Millour, Florentin, Spang, Alain, and Cure, Michel
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Thanks to the high spatial resolution provided by long baseline interferometry, it is possible to understand the complex circumstellar geometry around stars with the B[e] phenomenon. These stars are composed by objects in different evolutionary stages, like high- and low-mass evolved stars, intermediate-mass pre-main sequence stars and symbiotic objects. However, up to now more than 50% of the confirmed B[e] stars are not well classified, being called unclassified B[e] stars. From instruments like VLTI/AMBER and VLTI/MIDI, we have identified the presence of gaseous and dusty circumstellar disks, which have provided us with some hints related to the nature of these objects. Here, we show our results for two galactic stars with the B[e] phenomenon, HD 50138 and CPD-529243, based on interferometric measurements., Comment: Proceedings of SF2A conference in Nice 2012 - complete list of authors
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- 2012
15. The expanding dusty bipolar nebula around the nova V1280 Sco
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Chesneau, Olivier, Lagadec, E., Otulakowska-Hypka, M., Banerjee, D. P. K., Woodward, C. E., Harvey, E., Spang, A., Kervella, P., Millour, F., Nardetto, N., Ashok, N. M., Barlow, M. J., Bode, M. F., Evans, A., Lynch, D. K., O'Brien, T. J., Rudy, R. J., and Russell, R. W.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
V1280 Sco is one of the slowest dust-forming nova ever historically observed. We performed multi-epoch high-spatial resolution observations of the circumstellar dusty environment of V1280 Sco to investigate the level of asymmetry of the ejecta We observed V1280 Sco in 2009, 2010 and 2011 using unprecedented high angular resolution techniques. We used the NACO/VLT adaptive optics system in the J, H and K bands, together with contemporaneous VISIR/VLT mid-IR imaging that resolved the dust envelope of V1280 Sco, and SINFONI/VLT observations secured in 2011. We report the discovery of a dusty hourglass-shaped bipolar nebula. The apparent size of the nebula increased from 0.30" x 0.17" in July 2009 to 0.64" x 0.42" in July 2011. The aspect ratio suggests that the source is seen at high inclination. The central source shines efficiently in the K band and represents more than 56+/-5% of the total flux in 2009, and 87+/-6% in 2011. A mean expansion rate of 0.39+/-0.03 mas per day is inferred from the VISIR observations in the direction of the major axis, which represents a projected upper limit. Assuming that the dust shell expands in that direction as fast as the low-excitation slow ejecta detected in spectroscopy, this yields a lower limit distance to V1280 Sco of 1kpc; however, the systematic errors remain large due to the complex shape and velocity field of the dusty ejecta. The dust seems to reside essentially in the polar caps and no infrared flux is detected in the equatorial regions in the latest dataset. This may imply that the mass-loss was dominantly polar.
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- 2012
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16. Interactions in massive binary stars as seen by interferometry
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Millour, Florentin, Meilland, Anthony, Stee, Philippe, and Chesneau, Olivier
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
With the advent of large-collecting-area instruments, the number of objects that can be reached by optical long-baseline interferometry is steadily increasing. We present here a few results on massive binary stars, showing the interest of using this technique for studying the insight of interactions in these systems. Indeed, many massive stars with extended environments host, or are suspected to host, companion stars. These companions could have an important role in shaping the circumstellar environment of the system. These examples provide a view in which binarity could be an ingredient, among many others, for the activity of these stars., Comment: From solar environment to stellar environment, Roscoff : France (2011)
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- 2012
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17. The 2011 outburst of the recurrent novaT Pyx. Evidence for a face-on bipolar ejection
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Chesneau, Olivier, Meilland, A., Banerjee, D. P. K., Bouquin, Jean-Baptiste Le, Mcalister, H. A., Millour, F., Ridgway, S. T., Spang, A., Brummelaar, T. A. Ten, Wittkowski, M., Ashok, N. M., Benisty, M., Berger, J. -P., Boyajian, T. S., Farrington, C., Goldfinger, P. J., Mérand, A., Nardetto, N., Petrov, R., Rivinius, T., Schaefer, G., and Zins, G.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on near-IR interferometric observations of the outburst of the recurrent nova T Pyx. We obtained near-IR observations of T Pyx at dates ranging from t=2.37d to t=48.2d after the outburst, with the CLASSIC recombiner, located at the CHARA array, and with the PIONIER and AMBER recombiners, located at the VLTI array. These data are supplemented with near-IR photometry and spectra obtained at Mount Abu, India. Slow expansion velocities were measured (<300km/s) before t=20d (assuming D=3.5kpc). From t=28d on, the AMBER and PIONIER continuum visibilities (K and H band, respectively) are best simulated with a two component model consisting of an unresolved source plus an extended source whose expansion velocity onto the sky plane is lower than 700km/s. The expansion of the Brgamma line forming region, as inferred at t=28d and t=35d is slightly larger, implying velocities in the range 500-800km/s, still strikingly lower than the velocities of 1300-1600km/s inferred from the Doppler width of the line. Moreover, a remarkable pattern was observed in the Brgamma differential phases. A semi-quantitative model using a bipolar flow with a contrast of 2 between the pole and equator velocities, an inclination of i=15^{\circ} and a position angle P.A.=110^{\circ} provides a good match to the AMBER observables (spectra, differential visibilities and phases). At t=48d, a PIONIER dataset confirms the two component nature of the H band emission, consisting of an unresolved stellar source and an extended region whose appearance is circular and symmetric within error bars.These observations are most simply interpreted within the frame of a bipolar model, oriented nearly face-on. This finding has profound implications for the interpretation of past, current and future observations of the expanding nebula., Comment: Accepted Astronomy and Astrophysics (2011)
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- 2011
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18. Penetrating the Homunculus -- Near-Infrared Adaptive Optics Images of Eta Carinae
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Artigau, Étienne, Martin, John C., Humphreys, Roberta M., Davidson, Kris, Chesneau, Olivier, and Smith, Nathan
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Near-infrared adaptive optics imaging with NICI and NaCO reveal what appears to be a three-winged or lobed pattern, the "butterfly nebula", outlined by bright Br$\gamma$ and H$_{2}$ emission and light scattered by dust. In contrast, the [Fe II] emission does not follow the outline of the wings, but shows an extended bipolar distribution which is tracing the Little Homunculus ejected in $\eta$ Car's second or lesser eruption in the 1890's. Proper motions measured from the combined NICI and NaCO images together with radial velocities show that the knots and filaments that define the bright rims of the butterfly were ejected at two different epochs corresponding approximately to the great eruption and the second eruption. Most of the material is spatially distributed 10$\arcdeg$ to 20$\arcdeg$ above and below the equatorial plane apparently behind the Little Homunculus and the larger SE lobe. The equatorial debris either has a wide opening angle or the clumps were ejected at different latitudes relative to the plane. The butterfly is not a coherent physical structure or equatorial torus but spatially separate clumps and filaments ejected at different times, and now 2000 to 4000 AU from the star., Comment: 42 pages, 12 figures, To appear in the Astronomical Journal
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- 2011
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19. A mid-infrared imaging catalogue of post-AGB stars
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Lagadec, Eric, Verhoelst, Tijl, Mekarnia, Djamel, Suarez, Olga, Zijlstra, Albert A., Bendjoya, Philippe, Szczerba, Ryszard, Chesneau, Olivier, Van Winckel, Hans, Barlow, Michael J., Matsuura, Mikako, Bowey, Janet E., Lorenz-Martins, Silvia, and Gledhill, Tim
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Post-AGB stars are key objects for the study of the dramatic morphological changes of low- to intermediate-mass stars on their evolution from the Asymptotic Giant Branch (AGB) towards the Planetary Nebula stage. There is growing evidences that binary interaction processes may very well have a determining role in the shaping process of many objects, but so far direct evidence is still weak. We aim at a systematic study of the dust distribution around a large sample of Post-AGB stars as a probe of the symmetry breaking in the nebulae around these systems. We used imaging in the mid-infrared to study the inner part of these evolved stars to probe direct emission from dusty structures in the core of Post-AGB stars in order to better understand their shaping mechanisms. We imaged a sample of 93 evolved stars and nebulae in the mid-infrared using VISIR/VLT, T-Recs/Gemini South and Michelle/Gemini North. We found that all the the Proto-Planetary Nebulae we resolved show a clear departure from spherical symmetry. 59 out of the 93 observed targets appear to be non resolved. The resolved targets can be divided in two categories. The nebulae with a dense central core, that are either bipolar and multipolar. The nebulae with no central core have an elliptical morphology.The dense central torus observed likely host binary systems which triggered fast outflows that shaped the nebulae., Comment: 63 pages, 40 figures and 9 tables, accepted for publication in MNRAS. Images will be made available to the whole community via the Torun post-AGB catalogue (http://www.ncac.torun.pl/postagb2) and can be obtained by request to elagadec@eso.org A higher quality version of the paper can be downloaded at: http://www.eso.org/~elagadec/lagadec_mircatalogue_pagb_mnras2011.pdf
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- 2011
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20. The galactic unclassified B[e] star HD 50138. II. Interferometric constraints on the close circumstellar environment
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Fernandes, Marcelo Borges, Meilland, Anthony, Bendjoya, Philippe, de Souza, Armando Domiciano, Niccolini, Gilles, Chesneau, Olivier, Millour, Florentin, Spang, Alain, Stee, Philippe, and Kraus, Michaela
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
HD 50138 is a southern star that presents the B[e] phenomenon, but its evolutionary stage is still not well known. This object presents spectral variability, which can be explained by outbursts or shell phases and spectropolarimetric observations have shown the presence of a non-spherically symmetric circumstellar environment that is responsible for the B[e] phenomenon. Based on recent optical long baseline interferometric observations from the VLTI/MIDI and VLTI/AMBER, and also from the Keck segment-tilting experiment, we study the structure of the circumstellar environment of HD 50138, through a geometrical analytical modeling, also using the recent LITpro software and considering a large space of parameters. We resolve and describe its circumstellar geometry for the first time in detail. The presence of a dusty circumstellar disk with an orientation onto the sky-plane of 71+-7 degrees, which is perpendicular to the polarimetric measurements from the literature, was derived. We also derived that HD 50138 is seen under an intermediate angle related to the line of sight, 56+-4 degrees. In addition, the structure of the disk and the flux contributions of the gas and dust components is discussed., Comment: Paper accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysics (9 pages, 5 figures, 2011 in press)
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- 2011
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21. Imaging the spinning gas and dust in the disc around the supergiant A[e] star HD62623
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Millour, Florentin, Meilland, Anthony, Chesneau, Olivier, Stee, Philippe, Kanaan, Samer, Petrov, Romain, Mourard, Denis, and Kraus, S.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Context. To progress in the understanding of evolution of massive stars one needs to constrain the mass-loss and determine the phenomenon responsible for the ejection of matter an its reorganization in the circumstellar environment Aims. In order to test various mass-ejection processes, we probed the geometry and kinematics of the dust and gas surrounding the A[e] supergiant HD 62623. Methods. We used the combined high spectral and spatial resolution covered by the VLTI/AMBER instrument. Thanks to a new multiwavelength optical/IR interferometry imaging technique, we reconstructed the first velocity-resolved images with a milliarcsecond resolution in the infrared domain. Results. We managed to disentangle the dust and gas emission in the HD 62623 circumstellar disc.We measured the dusty disc inner inner rim, i.e. 6 mas, constrained the inclination angle and the position angle of the major-axis of the disc.We also measured the inner gaseous disc extension (2 mas) and probed its velocity field thanks to AMBER high spectral resolution. We find that the expansion velocity is negligible, and that Keplerian rotation is a favoured velocity field. Such a velocity field is unexpected if fast rotation of the central star alone is the main mechanism of matter ejection. Conclusions. As the star itself seems to rotate below its breakup-up velocity, rotation cannot explain the formation of the dense equatorial disc. Moreover, as the expansion velocity is negligible, radiatively driven wind is also not a suitable explanation to explain the disc formation. Consequently, the most probable hypothesis is that the accumulation of matter in the equatorial plane is due to the presence of the spectroscopic low mass companion., Comment: To be published soon in A\&A
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- 2010
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22. A disk inside the bipolar planetary nebula M2-9
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Lykou, Foteini, Chesneau, Olivier, Zijlstra, Albert A., Castro-Carrizo, Arancha, Lagadec, Eric, Balick, Bruce, and Smith, Nathan
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Bipolarity in proto-planetary and planetary nebulae is associated with events occurring in or around their cores. Past infrared observations have revealed the presence of dusty structures around the cores, many in the form of disks. Characterising those dusty disks provides invaluable constraints on the physical processes that govern the final mass expulsion of intermediate-mass stars. We focus this study on the famous M2-9 bipolar nebula, where the moving lighthouse beam pattern indicates the presence of a wide binary. The compact and dense dusty core in the center of the nebula can be studied by means of optical interferometry. M2-9 was observed with VLTI/MIDI at 39-47 m baselines with the UT2-UT3 and UT3-UT4 baseline configurations. These observations are interpreted using a dust radiative transfer Monte Carlo code. A disk-like structure is detected perpendicular to the lobes and a good fit is found with a stratified disk model composed of amorphous silicates. The disk is compact, 25$\times$35 mas at 8$\rm \mu m$, and 37$\times$46 mas at 13$\rm \mu m$. For the adopted distance of 1.2 kpc, the inner rim of the disk is $\sim$15 AU. The mass represents a few percent of the mass found in the lobes. The compactness of the disk puts strong constraints on the binary content of the system, given an estimated orbital period 90-120yr. We derive masses of the binary components between 0.6--1.0M$_{\sun}$ for a white dwarf and 0.6--1.4M$_{\sun}$ for an evolved star. We present different scenarios on the geometric structure of the disk accounting for the interactions of the binary system, which includes an accretion disk as well., Comment: 9 figures, A&A accepted
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- 2010
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23. Images of unclassified and supergiant B[e] stars disks with interferometry
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Millour, Florentin, Meilland, Anthony, Chesneau, Olivier, Fernandes, Marcelo Borges, Groh, José, Driebe, Thomas, Liermann, Adriane, and Weigelt, Gerd
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
B[e] stars are among the most peculiar objects in the sky. This spectral type, characterised by allowed and forbidden emission lines, and a large infrared excess, does not represent an homogenous class of objects, but instead, a mix of stellar bodies seen in all evolutionary status. Among them, one can find Herbig stars, planetary nebulae central stars, interacting binaries, supermassive stars, and even "unclassified" B[e] stars: systems sharing properties of several of the above. Interferometry, by resolving the innermost regions of these stellar systems, enables us to reveal the true nature of these peculiar stars among the peculiar B[e] stars., Comment: Proceeding submitted to the editors, to be published in the conference proceeding
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- 2010
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24. Imaging 'Pinwheel'nebulae with optical long-baseline interferometry
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Millour, Florentin, Driebe, Thomas, Groh, José, Chesneau, Olivier, Weigelt, Gerd, Liermann, Adriane, and Meilland, Anthony
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Dusty Wolf-Rayet stars are few but remarkable in terms of dust production rates (up to one millionth of solar mass per year). Infrared excesses associated to mass-loss are found in the sub-types WC8 and WC9. Few WC9d stars are hosting a "pinwheel" nebula, indirect evidence of a companion star around the primary. While few other WC9d stars have a dust shell which has been barely resolved so far, the available angular resolution offered by single telescopes is insufficient to confirm if they also host "pinwheel" nebulae or not. In this article, we present the possible detection of such nebula around the star WR118. We discuss about the potential of interferometry to image more "pinwheel" nebulae around other WC9d stars., Comment: To be published soon in the conference proceeding
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- 2010
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25. High spatial resolution monitoring of the activity of BA supergiant winds
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Chesneau, Olivier, Dessart, Luc, Kaufer, A., Mourard, D., Stahl, O., Prinja, R., and Owocki, S.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
There are currently two optical interferometry recombiners that can provide spectral resolutions better than 10000, AMBER/VLTI operating in the H-K bands, and VEGA/CHARA, recently commissioned, operating in the visible. These instruments are well suited to study the wind activity of the brightest AB supergiants in our vicinity, in lines such as H$\alpha$ or BrGamma. We present here the first observations of this kind, performed on Rigel (B8Ia) and Deneb (A2Ia). Rigel was monitored by AMBER in two campaigns, in 2006-2007 and 2009-2010, and observed in 2009 by VEGA; whereas Deneb was monitored in 2008-2009 by VEGA. The extension of the Halpha and BrGamma line forming regions were accurately measured and compared with CMFGEN models of both stars. Moreover, clear signs of activity were observed in the differential visibility and phases. These pioneer observations are still limited, but show the path for a better understanding of the spatial structure and temporal evolution of localized ejections using optical interferometry., Comment: Proceedings of conf. IAUS272 - Active OB stars - Paris, July 19-23, 2010
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- 2010
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26. Observations of dusty torii and compact disks around evolved stars: the high spatial resolution IR view
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Chesneau, Olivier
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The recent high angular resolution observations have shown that the transition between a globally symmetrical giant and a source surrounded by a spatially complex environment occurs relatively early, as soon as the external layers of the stars are not tightly bound to the core of the star anymore. In this review, the emphasis will be put on the delineating the differences between the torus and disk classification through the presentation of many examples of near-IR and mid-IR high angular resolution observations. These examples cover the disks discovered in the core of some bipolar nebulae, post-AGB disks, the dusty environment around born-again stars and recent novae, and also the disks encountered around more massive evolved sources. We discuss the broad range of circumstances and time scales for which bipolar nebulae with disks are observed.
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- 2010
27. Fast ray-tracing algorithm for circumstellar structures (FRACS). II. Disc parameters of the B[e] supergiant CPD-57° 2874 from VLTI/MIDI data
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De Souza, Armando Domiciano, Bendjoya, Philippe, Niccolini, Gilles, Chesneau, Olivier, Fernandes, Marcelo Borges, Carciofi, A. C., Spang, A., Stee, Philippe, and Driebe, Thomas
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
B[e] supergiants are luminous, massive post-main sequence stars exhibiting non-spherical winds, forbidden lines, and hot dust in a disc-like structure. The physical properties of their rich and complex circumstellar environment (CSE) are not well understood, partly because these CSE cannot be easily resolved at the large distances found for B[e] supergiants (typically $\ga 1$~kpc). From mid-IR spectro-interferometric observations obtained with VLTI/MIDI we seek to resolve and study the CSE of the Galactic B[e] supergiant CPD-57\degr\,2874. For a physical interpretation of the observables (visibilities and spectrum) we use our ray-tracing radiative transfer code (FRACS), which is optimised for thermal spectro-interferometric observations. Thanks to the short computing time required by FRACS ($<10$~s per monochromatic model), best-fit parameters and uncertainties for several physical quantities of CPD-57\degr\,2874 were obtained, such as inner dust radius, relative flux contribution of the central source and of the dusty CSE, dust temperature profile, and disc inclination. The analysis of VLTI/MIDI data with FRACS allowed one of the first direct determinations of physical parameters of the dusty CSE of a B[e] supergiant based on interferometric data and using a full model-fitting approach. In a larger context, the study of B[e] supergiants is important for a deeper understanding of the complex structure and evolution of hot, massive stars.
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- 2010
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28. Building the 'JMMC Stellar Diameters Catalog' using SearchCal
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Lafrasse, Sylvain, Mella, Guillaume, Bonneau, Daniel, Duvert, Gilles, Delfosse, Xavier, Chesneau, Olivier, and Chelli, Alain
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The JMMC Calibrator Workgroup has long developed methods to ascertain the angular diameter of stars, and provides this expertise in the SearchCal software. SearchCal dynamically finds calibrators near science objects by querying CDS hosted catalogs according to observational parameters. Initially limited to bright objects (K magnitude - 5.5), it has been upgraded with a new method providing calibrators without any magnitude limit but those of queried catalogs. We introduce here a new static catalog of stellar diameters, containing more than 38000 entries, obtained from SearchCal results aggregation on the whole celestial sphere, complete for all stars with HIPPARCOS parallaxes. We detail the methods and tools used to produce and study this catalog, and compare the static catalog approach with the dynamical querying provided by SearchCal engine. We also introduce a new Virtual Observatory service, enabling the reporting of, and querying about, stars flagged as "bad calibrators" by astronomers, adding this ever-growing database to our SearchCal service., Comment: 11 pages, to be published in SPIE'2010 conference on "Optical and Infrared Interferometry II"
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- 2010
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29. Time, spatial, and spectral resolution of the Halpha line-formation region of Deneb and Rigel with the VEGA/CHARA interferometer
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Chesneau, Olivier, Dessart, Luc, Mourard, D., Berio, Ph., Buil, Ch., Bonneau, D., Fernandes, M. Borges, Clausse, J. M., Delaa, O., Marcotto, A., Meilland, A., Millour, F., Nardetto, N., Perraut, K., Roussel, A., Spang, A., Stee, Ph., Tallon-Bosc, I., Mcalister, Harold A., Brummelaar, T. A. Ten, Sturmann, J., Sturmann, L., Turner, N., Farrington, C., and Goldfinger, P. J.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
BA-type supergiants are amongst the most optically-bright stars. They are observable in extragalactic environments, hence potential accurate distance indicators. Emission activity in the Halpha line of the BA supergiants Rigel (B8Ia) and Deneb (A2Ia) is indicative of presence of localized time-dependent mass ejections. Here, we employ optical interferometry to study the Halpha line-formation region in these stellar environments. High spatial- (0.001 arcsec) and spectral- (R=30 000) resolution observations of Halpha were obtained with the visible recombiner VEGA installed on the CHARA interferometer, using the S1S2 array-baseline (34m). Six independent observations were done on Deneb over the years 2008 and 2009, and two on Rigel in 2009. We analyze this dataset with the 1D non-LTE radiative-transfer code CMFGEN, and assess the impact of the wind on the visible and near-IR interferometric signatures, using both Balmer-line and continuum photons. We observe a visibility decrease in Halpha for both Rigel and Deneb, suggesting that the line-formation region is extended (1.5-1.75 R*). We observe a significant visibility decrease for Deneb in the SiII6371 line. We witness time variations in the differential phase for Deneb, implying an inhomogeneous and unsteady circumstellar environment, while no such variability is seen in differential visibilities. Radiative-transfer modeling of Deneb, with allowance for stellar-wind mass loss, accounts fairly well for the observed decrease in the Halpha visibility. Based on the observed differential visibilities, we estimate that the mass-loss rate of Deneb has changed by less than 5%.
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- 2010
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30. Spectro-interferometric observations of interacting massive stars with VEGA/CHARA
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Bonneau, Daniel, Chesneau, Olivier, Mourard, Denis, and Stee, Philippe
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We obtained spectro-interferometric observations in the visible of $\beta$ Lyrae and $\upsilon$ Sgr using the instrument VEGA of the CHARA interferometric array. For $\beta$ Lyrae, the dispersed fringe visibilities and differential phases were obtained in spectral regions containing the H$\alpha$ and HeI 6678 lines and the H$\beta$ and HeI 4921 lines. Whereas the source is unresolved in the continuum, the source of the emission lines is resolved and the photocenter of the bulk of the H$\alpha$ emission exhibits offsets correlated with the orbital phase. For $\upsilon$ Sgr, both the continuum and H$\alpha$ sources are resolved, but no clear binary signal is detected. The differential phase shift across the line reveals that the bulk of the H$\alpha$ emission is clearly offset from the primary.
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- 2010
31. The galactic unclassified B[e] star HD 50138. I. A possible new shell phase
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Fernandes, Marcelo Borges, Kraus, Michaela, Chesneau, Olivier, de Souza, Armando Domiciano, de Araujo, Francisco Xavier, Stee, Philippe, and Meilland, Anthony
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The observed spectral variation of HD 50138 has led different authors to classify it in a very wide range of spectral types and luminosity classes (from B5 to A0 and III to Ia) and at different evolutionary stages as either HAeBe star or classical Be. Aims: Based on new high-resolution optical spectroscopic data from 1999 and 2007 associated to a photometric analysis, the aim of this work is to provide a deep spectroscopic description and a new set of parameters for this unclassified southern B[e] star and its interstellar extinction. Methods: From our high-resolution optical spectroscopic data separated by 8 years, we perform a detailed spectral description, presenting the variations seen and discussing their possible origin. We derive the interstellar extinction to HD 50138 by taking the influences of the circumstellar matter in the form of dust and an ionized disk into account. Based on photometric data from the literature and the new Hipparcos distance, we obtain a revised set of parameters for HD 50138. Results: Because of the spectral changes, we tentatively suggest that a new shell phase could have taken place prior to our observations in 2007. We find a color excess value of E(B-V) = 0.08 mag, and from the photometric analysis, we suggest that HD 50138 is a B6-7 III-V star. A discussion of the different evolutionary scenarios is also provided., Comment: Paper accepted for publication in A&A main journal (12 pages, 16 figures and a 3 pages-table). Language corrected version
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- 2009
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32. B[e] stars at the highest angular resolution: the case of HD87643
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Millour, Florentin, Chesneau, Olivier, Fernandes, Marcelo Borges, and Meilland, Anthony
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
New results on the B[e] star HD87643 are presented here. They were obtained with a wide range of different instruments, from wide-field imaging with the WFI camera, high resolution spectroscopy with the FEROS instrument, high angular resolution imaging with the adaptive optics camera NACO, to the highest angular resolution available with AMBER on the VLTI. We report the detection of a companion to HD87643 with AMBER, subsequently confirmed in the NACO data. Implications of that discovery to some of the previously difficult-to-understand data-sets are then presented., Comment: To be published in the proceedings of the 2009 SF2A conference
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- 2009
33. VLTI/AMBER unveils a possible dusty pinwheel nebula in WR118
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Millour, Florentin, Driebe, Thomas, Chesneau, Olivier, Groh, José, Hofmann, Karl-Heinz, Murakawa, Koji, Ohnaka, Keiichi, Schertl, Dieter, and Weigelt, Gerd
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Most Wolf-Rayet stars (WR) of WC9 sub-type exhibit a dusty circumstellar envelope, but it is still a matter of debate how dust can form in their harsh environment. In a few cases, a pinwheel-like structure of the dusty envelope has been detected. Therefore, it has been suggested that dust formation in all dusty WR stars might be linked to colliding winds in a binary system. We probed the innermost region of the circumstellar dust shell of the deeply embedded WR star WR 118. We carried out spectro-interferometric observations using the AMBER instrument of ESO's Very Large Telescope Interferometer in low-spectral resolution mode (R = 35). The K-band observations were obtained with three 1.8 m telescopes spanning projected baselines between 9.2 and 40.1 m. At high spatial frequencies, the AMBER visibilities exhibit a prominent lobe, indicating that the envelope contains one or several zones with a large local intensity gradient. The strong closure phase signal clearly shows that the circumstellar envelope of WR 118 can only be described by an asymmetric intensity distribution. We show that a pinwheel nebula seen at low inclination is consistent with the AMBER data. Its size was determined to be 13.9+-1.1 mas. WR 118 possibly harbors a pinwheel nebula, which suggests a binary nature of the system. According to our best model, the period of the system would be ~60 days (for d=3 kpc), making WR 118 the shortest-period pinwheel nebula known so far., Comment: Letter accepted in A&A for publication
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- 2009
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34. Catching the Binaries Amongst B[e] Stars
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Kraus, Michaela, Fernandes, Marcelo Borges, and Chesneau, Olivier
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
It is surprising to find dust around B type stars, as in the case of B[e] stars. These stars exhibit a dense, dusty environment witnessed by their infrared-excess and many emission lines from permitted and forbidden transitions. Given the large uncertainties on their distances, this spectral type gathers many different kind of sources that may harbor a similar circumstellar environment, i.e. a dense dusty disk. At the exception of Young Stellar Objects, in many cases, it is very difficult to understand the origin of such a disk without invoking binarity. We describe current powerful methods, like spectral disentangling, spectro-astrometry and long baseline interferometry, to detect especially close binaries amongst the unclassified B[e] stars. The role of binary mergers in the formation of the B[e] phenomenon, especially in supergiants and compact PNe, is also discussed., Comment: 4 pages, to appear in proceedings of Binaries - Key to Comprehension of the Universe (ASP Conference Series)
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- 2009
35. VLTI/MIDI observations of 7 classical Be stars
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Meilland, Anthony, Stee, Philippe, Chesneau, Olivier, and Jones, Carol
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We measured the mid-infrared extension of the gaseous disk surrounding seven Be stars in order to constrain the geometry of their circumstellar environments and to try to infer physical parameters characterizing these disks. We used the VLTI/MIDI instrument with baselines up to 130 m to obtain an angular resolution of about 15 mas in the N band and compared our results with previous K band measurements obtained with the VLTI/AMBER instrument and/or the CHARA interferometer. We obtained one calibrated visibility measurement for each of the four stars, p Car, zeta Tau, kappa CMa, and alpha Col, two for delta Cen and beta CMi, and three for alpha Ara. Almost all targets remain unresolved even with the largest VLTI baseline of 130m, evidence that their circumstellar disk extension is less than 10 mas. The only exception is alpha Ara, which is clearly resolved and well-fitted by an elliptical envelope with a major axis a=5.8+-0.8mas and an axis ratio a/b=2.4+-1 at 8 microns. This extension is similar to the size and flattening measured with the VLTI/AMBER instrument in the K band at 2 microns. The size of the circumstellar envelopes for these classical Be stars does not seem to vary strongly on the observed wavelength between 8 and 12microns. Moreover, the size and shape of Alpha Ara's disk is almost identical at 2, 8, and 12microns.
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- 2009
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36. A binary engine fuelling HD87643' s complex circumstellar environment, using AMBER/VLTI
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Millour, Florentin, Chesneau, Olivier, Fernandes, Marcelo Borges, Meilland, Anthony, Mars, Gilbert, Benoist, C., Thiébaut, E., Stee, Philippe, Hofmann, K. -H., Baron, Fabien, Young, John R., Bendjoya, Philippe, Carciofi, A. C., De Souza, Armando Domiciano, Driebe, Thomas, Jankov, Slobodan, Kervella, Pierre, Petrov, R. G., Robbe-Dubois, Sylvie, Vakili, Farrokh, Waters, L. B. F. M., and Weigelt, Gerd
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
Context. The star HD 87643, exhibiting the "B[e] phenomenon", has one of the most extreme infrared excesses for this object class. It harbours a large amount of both hot and cold dust, and is surrounded by an extended reflection nebula. Aims. One of our major goals was to investigate the presence of a companion in HD87643. In addition, the presence of close dusty material was tested through a combination of multi-wavelength high spatial 5Aresolution observations. Methods. We observed HD 87643 with high spatial resolution techniques, using the near-IR AMBER/VLTI interferometer with baselines ranging from 60 m to 130 m and the mid-IR MIDI/VLTI interferometer with baselines ranging from 25 m to 65 m. These observations are complemented by NACO/VLT adaptive-optics-corrected images in the K and L-bands, ESO-2.2m optical Wide-Field Imager large-scale images in the B, V and R-bands, Results. We report the direct detection of a companion to HD 87643 by means of image synthesis using the AMBER/VLTI instrument. The presence of the companion is confirmed by the MIDI and NACO data, although with a lower confidence. The companion is separated by ~ 34 mas with a roughly north-south orientation. The period must be large (several tens of years) and hence the orbital parameters are not determined yet. Binarity with high eccentricity might be the key to interpreting the extreme characteristics of this system, namely a dusty circumstellar envelope around the primary, a compact dust nebulosity around the binary system and a complex extended nebula witnessing past violent ejections.
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- 2009
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37. On the morphology of the compact dust shell in the symbiotic system HM Sagittae
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Sacuto, Stéphane and Chesneau, Olivier
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The symbiotic system HM Sagittae consists of a Mira star and a secondary White Dwarf component. The dust content of the system was severely affected by the nova outburst in 1975, which is still ongoing. The capabilities of optical interferometry operating in the mid-IR allow us to investigate the current geometry of the dust envelope. We test our previous spectro-interferometric study of this system with new interferometric configurations, increasing the uv coverage and allowing us to ascertain the appearance of the source between 8 and 13micron. We used the MIDI instrument of the VLTI with the unit telescopes (UTs) and auxiliary telescopes (ATs) providing baselines oriented from PA=42degrees to 127 degrees. The data are interpreted by means of an elliptical Gaussian model and the spherical radiative transfer code DUSTY. We demonstrate that the data can be reproduced well by an optically thick dust shell of amorphous silicate, typical of those encountered around Mira stars, whose measured dimension increases from 8 to 13micron. We confirm that the envelope is more extended in a direction perpendicular to the binary axis. The level of elongation increases with wavelength in contrast to our claim in a previous study. The wider uv coverage allows us to deepen our previous investigations of the close circumstellar structure of this object.
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- 2008
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38. A dense disk of dust around the born-again Sakurai's object
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Chesneau, Olivier, Clayton, G. C., Lykou, F., De Marco, O., Hummel, Ch., Kerber, F., Lagadec, E., Nordhaus, J., Zijlstra, A. A., and Evans, A.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
In 1996, Sakurai's object (V4334 Sgr) suddenly brightened in the centre of a faint Planetary Nebula (PN). This very rare event was interpreted as the reignition of a hot white dwarf that caused a rapid evolution back to the cool giant phase. From 1998 on, a copious amount of dust has formed continuously, screening out the star which has remained embedded in this expanding high optical depth envelope. The new observations, reported here, are used to study the morphology of the circumstellar dust in order to investigate the hypothesis that Sakurai's Object is surrounded by a thick spherical envelope of dust. We have obtained unprecedented, high-angular resolution spectro-interferometric observations, taken with the mid-IR interferometer MIDI/VLTI, which resolve the dust envelope of Sakurai's object. We report the discovery of a unexpectedly compact (30 x 40 milliarcsec, 105 x 140 AU assuming a distance of 3.5 kpc), highly inclined, dust disk. We used Monte Carlo radiative-transfer simulations of a stratified disk to constrain its geometric and physical parameters, although such a model is only a rough approximation of the rapidly evolving dust structure. Even though the fits are not fully satisfactory, some useful and robust constraints can be inferred. The disk inclination is estimated to be 75+/-3 degree with a large scale height of 47+/-7 AU. The dust mass of the disk is estimated to be 6 10^{-5} solar mass. The major axis of the disk (132+/-3 degree) is aligned with an asymmetry seen in the old PN that was re-investigated as part of this study. This implies that the mechanism responsible for shaping the dust envelope surrounding Sakurai's object was already at work when the old PN formed., Comment: A&A Letter, accepted
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- 2008
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39. Near-Infrared Studies of V1280 Sco (Nova Scorpii 2007)
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Das, Ramkrishna, Banerjee, Dipankar, Ashok, Nagarhalli, and Chesneau, Olivier
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present spectroscopic and photometric results of Nova V1280 Sco which was discovered in outburst in early 2007 February. The large number of spectra obtained of the object leads to one of the most extensive, near-infrared spectral studies of a classical nova. The spectra evolve from a P-Cygni phase to an emission-line phase and at a later stage is dominated by emission from the dust that formed in this nova. A detailed model is computed to identify and study characteristics of the spectral lines. Inferences from the model address the vexing question of which novae have the ability to form dust. It is demonstrated, and strikingly corroborated with observations, that the presence of lines in the early spectra of low-ionization species like Na and Mg - indicative of low temperature conditions - appear to be reliable indicators that dust will form in the ejecta. It is theoretically expected that mass loss during a nova outburst is a sustained process. Spectroscopic evidence for such a sustained mass loss, obtained by tracing the evolution of a P-Cygni feature in the Brackett gamma line, is presented here allowing a lower limit of 25-27 days to be set for the mass-loss duration. Photometric data recording the nova's extended 12 day climb to peak brightness after discovery is used to establish an early fireball expansion and also show that the ejection began well before maximum brightness. The JHK light curves indicate the nova had a fairly strong second outburst around 100 days after the first., Comment: Accepted in MNRAS. The paper contains 8 figures and 4 tables. Few typographical errors were corrected
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- 2008
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40. Wolf-Rayet stars probed by AMBER/VLTI
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Millour, Florentin, Chesneau, Olivier, Driebe, Thomas, Petrov, Romain, Bonneau, Daniel, Dessart, Luc, Hofmann, Karl-Heinz, and Weigelt, Gerd
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
Massive stars deeply influence their surroundings by their luminosity and the injection of kinetic energy. So far, they have mostly been studied with spatially unresolved observations, although evidence of geometrical complexity of their wind are numerous. Interferometry can provide spatially resolved observations of massive stars and their immediate vicinity. Specific geometries (disks, jets, latitude-dependent winds) can be probed by this technique. The first observation of a Wolf-Rayet (WR) star (\gamma^2 Vel) with the AMBER/VLTI instrument yielded to a re-evaluation of its distance and an improved characterization of the stellar components, from a very limited data-set. This motivated our team to increase the number of WR targets observed with AMBER. We present here new preliminary results that encompass several spectral types, ranging from early WN to evolved dusty WC. We present unpublished data on WR79a, a massive star probably at the boundary between the O and Wolf- Rayet type, evidencing some Wolf-Rayet broad emission lines from an optically thin wind. We also present new data obtained on \gamma^2 Vel that can be compared to the up-to-date interferometry-based orbital parameters from North et al. (2007). We discuss the presence of a wind-wind collision zone in the system and provide preliminary analysis suggesting the presence of such a structure in the data. Then, we present data obtained on 2 dusty Wolf-Rayet stars: WR48a-b and WR118, the latter exhibiting some clues of a pinwheel-like structure from the visibility variations., Comment: This paper will be published in the proceeding of SPIE ``astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation: Optical and Infrared Interferometry''
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- 2008
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41. VLTI monitoring of the dust formation event of the Nova V1280 Sco
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Chesneau, Olivier, Banerjee, Dipankar, Millour, F., Nardetto, N., Spang, A., Sacuto, S., Wittkowski, M., Ashok, N. M., Das, R. K., Hummel, Ch., Kraus, S., Lagadec, Eric, Morel, S., Petr-Gotzens, M., Rantakyro, F. T., and Schöller, M.
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the first high spatial resolution monitoring of the dust forming nova V1280 Sco performed with the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI). Spectra and visibilities were obtained from the onset of the dust formation 23 days after discovery till day 145, using the instruments AMBER and MIDI. These interferometric observations are complemented by near-infrared data from the 1.2m Mt. Abu Infrared Observatory, India. The observations are first interpreted with simple models but more complex models, involving a second shell, are necessary to explain the data obtained from t=110d after outburst. This behavior is in accordance with the light curve of V1280 Sco which exhibits a secondary peak around t=106d, followed by a new steep decline, suggesting a new dust forming event. Spherical dust shell models generated with the DUSTY code are also used to investigate the parameters of the main dust shell. Using uniform disk and Gaussian models, these observations allow us to determine an apparent linear expansion rate for the dust shell of 0.35 +/- 0.03 mas/day and the approximate time of ejection of the matter in which dust formed as t_ejec=10.5+/-7d, i.e. close to the maximum brightness. This information, combined with the expansion velocity of 500+/-100km/s, implies a distance estimate of 1.6+/-0.4kpc. The dust mass generated was typically 2-8 10^-9 solar mass per day. Considering that the dust forming event lasted at least 200-250d, the mass of the ejected material is likely to have exceeded 10^-4 solar mass.
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- 2008
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42. The close circumstellar environment of the semi-regular S-type star Pi^1 Gruis
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Sacuto, Stéphane, Jorissen, Alain, Cruzalèbes, Pierre, Chesneau, Olivier, Ohnaka, Keiichi, Quirrenbach, Andreas, and Lopez, Bruno
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We study the close circumstellar environment of the nearby S-type star Pi^1 Gruis using high spatial-resolution, mid-infrared observations from the ESO/VLTI. Spectra and visibilities were obtained with the MIDI interferometer on the VLT Auxiliary Telescopes. The cool M5III giant Beta Gruis was used as bright primary calibrator, and a dedicated spectro-interferometric study was undertaken to determine its angular diameter accurately. The MIDI measurements were fitted with the 1D numerical radiative transfer code DUSTY to determine the dust shell parameters of Pi^1 Gruis. Taking into account the low spatial extension of the model in the 8-9 $\mu$m spectral band for the smallest projected baselines, we consider the possibility of a supplementary molecular shell. The MIDI visibility and phase data are mostly dominated by the spherical 21 mas (694 Rsol) central star, while the extended dusty environment is over-resolved even with the shortest baselines. No obvious departure from spherical symmetry is found on the milliarcsecond scale. The spectro-interferometric observations are well-fitted by an optically thin (tau(dust)<0.01 in the band) dust shell that is located at about 14 stellar radii with a typical temperature of 700 K and composed of 70% silicate and 30% of amorphous alumina grains. An optically thin (tau(mol)<0.1 in the N band) H2O+SiO molecular shell extending from the photosphere of the star up to 4.4 stellar radii with a typical temperature of 1000 K is added to the model to improve the fit in the 8-9 $\mu$m spectral band. We discuss the probable binary origin of asymmetries as revealed by millimetric observations.
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- 2008
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43. A disc in the heart of the Ant nebula
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Lykou, Foteini, Chesneau, Olivier, Lagadec, Eric, and Zijlstra, Albert
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the discovery of a silicate disc at the centre of the planetary nebula Mz3 (the Ant). The nebula was observed with MIDI on the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI). The visibilities obtained at different orientations clearly indicate the presence of a dusty, nearly edge-on disc in the heart of the nebula. An amorphous silicate absorption feature is clearly seen in our mid-IR spectrum and visibility curves. We used radiative transfer Monte Carlo simulations to constrain the geometrical and physical parameters of the disc. We derive an inner radius of 9 AU (~6mas assuming D=1.4kpc). This disc is perpendicular to, but a factor of 10^{3} smaller than the optical bipolar outflow., Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the "Asymmetrical Planetary Nebulae IV" conference, corrected typo
- Published
- 2007
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44. A silicate disk in the heart of the Ant
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Chesneau, Olivier, Lykou, Foteini, Balick, Bruce, Lagadec, Eric, Matsuura, Mikako, Smith, Nathan, Spang, Alain, Wolf, Sebastian, and Zijlstra, Albert A.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We aim at getting high spatial resolution information on the dusty core of bipolar planetary nebulae to directly constrain the shaping process. Methods: We present observations of the dusty core of the extreme bipolar planetary nebula Menzel 3 (Mz 3, Hen 2-154, the Ant) taken with the mid-infrared interferometer MIDI/VLTI and the adaptive optics NACO/VLT. The core of Mz 3 is clearly resolved with MIDI in the interferometric mode, whereas it is unresolved from the Ks to the N bands with single dish 8.2 m observations on a scale ranging from 60 to 250 mas. A striking dependence of the dust core size with the PA angle of the baselines is observed, that is highly suggestive of an edge-on disk whose major axis is perpendicular to the axis of the bipolar lobes. The MIDI spectrum and the visibilities of Mz 3 exhibit a clear signature of amorphous silicate, in contrast to the signatures of crystalline silicates detected in binary post-AGB systems, suggesting that the disk might be relatively young. We used radiative-transfer Monte Carlo simulations of a passive disk to constrain its geometrical and physical parameters. Its inclination (74 degrees $\pm$ 3 degrees) and position angle (5 degrees $\pm$ 5 degrees) are in accordance with the values derived from the study of the lobes. The inner radius is 9$\pm$ 1 AU and the disk is relatively flat. The dust mass stored in the disk, estimated as 1 x 10-5Msun, represents only a small fraction of the dust mass found in the lobes and might be a kind of relic of an essentially polar ejection process.
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- 2007
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45. The molecular and dusty composition of Betelgeuse's inner circumstellar environment
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Perrin, Guy, Verhoelst, Tijl, Ridgway, Stephen T., Cami, Jan, Nguyen, Quynh Nhu, Chesneau, Olivier, Lopez, Bruno, Leinert, Christoph, and Richichi, Andrea
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The study of the atmosphere of red supergiant stars in general and of Betelgeuse (alpha Orionis) in particular is of prime importance to understand dust formation and how mass is lost to the interstellar medium in evolved massive stars. A molecular shell, the MOLsphere (Tsuji, 2000a), in the atmosphere of Betelgeuse has been proposed to account for the near- and mid-infrared spectroscopic observations of Betelgeuse. The goal is to further test this hypothesis and to identify some of the molecules in this MOLsphere. We report on measurements taken with the mid-infrared two-telescope beam combiner of the VLTI, MIDI, operated between 7.5 and 13.5 $\mu$m. The data are compared to a simple geometric model of a photosphere surrounded by a warm absorbing and emitting shell. Physical characteristics of the shell are derived: size, temperature and optical depth. The chemical constituents are determined with an analysis consistent with available infrared spectra and interferometric data. We are able to account for the measured optical depth of the shell in the N band, the ISO-SWS spectrum and K and L band interferometric data with a shell whose inner and outer radii are given by the above range and with the following species: H2O, SiO and Al2O3. These results confirm the MOLsphere model. We bring evidence for more constituents and for the presence of species participating in the formation of dust grains in the atmosphere of the star, i.e. well below the distance at which the dust shell is detected. We believe these results bring key elements to the understanding of mass loss in Betelgeuse and red supergiants in general and bring support to the dust-driven scenario., Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2007
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46. Near-infrared VLT adaptive optics imaging of evolved stars
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Lagadec, Eric, Chesneau, Olivier, Zijlstra, Albert A., Matsuura, Mikako, and Mékarnia, Djamel
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Astrophysics - Abstract
The high angular resolution and dynamic range achieved by the NACO adaptive optics system on the VLT is an excellent tool to study the morphology of Planetary Nebulae (PNe). We observed four stars in different evolutionary stages from the AGB to the PNe phase. The images of the inner parts of the PN Hen 2-113 reveal the presence of a dusty torus tilted with respect to all the other structures of the nebula and the present of hot dust close to the hot central star. The NACO observations of Roberts 22 reveal an amazingly complex nebular morphology with a S-shape that can be interpreted in terms of the 'warped disc' scenario of Icke (2003). Combined NACO and MIDI (the VLTI mid-infrared interferometer) observations of the nebula OH 231.8+4.2 have enabled us to resolve a very compact (diameter of 30-40 mas, corresponding to 40-50 a.u.) dusty structure in the core of the nebula. Finally, recent observations of the AGB star V Hydrae show that this star present a departure from spherical symmetry in its inner shell and is probably on its way to become an asymmetrical planetary nebula. These observations show that NACO is a great instrument for the discovery and study of small structures in circumstellar envelopes and PNe and a good complement to interferometric devices., Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, to appear in the proceedings on the conference "Asymetrical Planetary Nebula IV"
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- 2007
47. A compact dust shell in the symbiotic system HM Sge
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Sacuto, Stéphane, Chesneau, Olivier, Vannier, Martin, and Cruzalèbes, Pierre
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We present high spatial resolution observations of the mid-infrared core of the dusty symbiotic system HM Sge. The MIDI interferometer was used with the VLT UTs and ATs providing baselines oriented from PA=42° to 105°. The MIDI visibilities are compared with the ones predicted in the frame of various spherical dust shells published in the literature involving single or double dusty shells. The mid-IR environment is unresolved by a 8m telescope and the MIDI spectrum exhibits a level similar to the ISO spectra recorded 10 yr ago. The estimated Gaussian HWHM of the shell of 12AU in the 8-9$\mu$m range, and 18AU in the 11-12$\mu$m range, are much smaller than the angular separation between the Mira and the White Dwarf of 60AU. The discrepancies between the HWHM at different angle orientations suggest an increasing level of asymmetry from 13 to 8$\mu$m. The observations are well fitted by the densest and smallest model published in the literature based on the ISO data, although such a model does not account for the variations of near-IR photometry due to the Mira pulsation cycle suggesting a much smaller optical thickness. These observations also discard the two shells models, developed to take into account the effect of the WD illumination onto the dusty wind of the Mira. These observations show that a high rate of dust formation is occurring in the vicinity of the Mira which seems to be not highly perturbed by the hot companion.
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- 2007
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48. VLTI/AMBER interferometric observations of the recurrent Nova RS Oph 5.5 days after outburst
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Chesneau, Olivier, Nardetto, N., Millour, F., Hummel, Ch., De Souza, A. Domiciano, Bonneau, D., Vannier, M., Rantakyro, F. T., Spang, A., Malbet, F., Mourard, D., Bode, M. F., O'brien, T. J., Skinner, G., Petrov, R., Stee, Ph., Tatulli, E., and Vakili, F.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We report on interferometric AMBER/VLTI observations of the recurrent nova RS Oph five days after its outburst on 2006 Feb 12. Using three baselines from 44 to 86m, and a spectral resolution of 1500, we measured the extension of the emission in the K band continuum and in the BrG and HeI2.06 micron lines. The continuum visibilities were interpreted by fitting simple geometric models consisting of uniform and Gaussian ellipses, ring and binary models. The visibilities and differential phases in the BrG line were interpreted using skewed ring models aiming to perform a limited parametric reconstruction of the extension and kinematics of the line forming region. The limited uv coverage does not allow discrimination between filled models and rings. Binary models are discarded because the measured closure phase in the continuum is close to zero. The visibilities in the lines are at a low level compared to their nearby continuum, consistent with a more extended line forming region for HeI2.06 than BrG. The ellipse models for the continuum and for the lines are highly flattened and share the same position angle. Two radial velocity fields are apparent in the BrG line: a 'slow' expanding ring-like structure (v~1800km/s), and a 'fast' structure extended in the E-W direction (v~2500-3000km/s). These results confirm the basic fireball model, contrary to the conclusions of other interferometric observations conducted by Monnier et al. (2006)., Comment: Accepted in A&A
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- 2006
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49. A close look into the carbon disk at the core of the planetary nebula CPD-568032
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Chesneau, Olivier, Collioud, Arnaud, De Marco, Orsola, Wolf, Sebastian, Lagadec, Eric, Zijlstra, Albert A., Rothkopf, Alexander, Acker, AGNès, Clayton, Geoff C., and Lopez, B.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We present high spatial resolution observations of the dusty core of the Planetary Nebula with Wolf-Rayet central star CPD-568032. These observations were taken with the mid-infrared interferometer VLTI/MIDI in imaging mode providing a typical 300 mas resolution and in interferometric mode using UT2-UT3 47m baseline providing a typical spatial resolution of 20 mas. The visible HST images exhibit a complex multilobal geometry dominated by faint lobes. The farthest structures are located at 7" from the star. The mid-IR environment of CPD-568032 is dominated by a compact source, barely resolved by a single UT telescope in a 8.7 micron filter. The infrared core is almost fully resolved with the three 40-45m projected baselines ranging from -5 to 51 degree but smooth oscillating fringes at low level have been detected in spectrally dispersed visibilities. This clear signal is interpreted in terms of a ring structure which would define the bright inner rim of the equatorial disk. Geometric models allowed us to derive the main geometrical parameters of the disk. For instance, a reasonably good fit is reached with an achromatic and elliptical truncated Gaussian with a radius of 97+/-11 AU, an inclination of 28+/-7 degree and a PA for the major axis at 345+/-7 degree. Furthermore, we performed some radiative transfer modeling aimed at further constraining the geometry and mass content of the disk, by taking into account the MIDI dispersed visibilities, spectra, and the large aperture SED of the source. These models show that the disk is mostly optically thin in the N band and highly flared., Comment: Paper accepted in A&A
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- 2006
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50. Long Baseline Interferometry of Be Stars
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Chesneau, Olivier and Rivinius, Thomas
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Astrophysics - Abstract
We give an introduction to interferometrical concepts and their applicability to Be stars. The first part of the paper concentrates on a short historic overview and basic principles of two-beam interferometric observations. In the second part, the VLTI/MIDI instrument is introduced and its first results on Be stars, obtained on alpha Ara and delta Cen, are outlined., Comment: To appear in proceedings of the Astronomische Gesellshaft meeting, 2004
- Published
- 2005
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