1. High-resolution, H band Spectroscopy of Be Stars with SDSS-III/APOGEE: I. New Be Stars, Line Identifications, and Line Profiles
- Author
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Chojnowski, S. Drew, Whelan, David G., Wisniewski, John P., Majewski, Steven R., Hall, Matthew, Shetrone, Matthew, Beaton, Rachael, Burton, Adam, Damke, Guillermo, Eikenberry, Steve, Hasselquist, Sten, Holtzman, Jon A., Meszaros, Szabolcs, Nidever, David, Schneider, Donald P., Wilson, John, Zasowski, Gail, Bizyaev, Dmitry, Brewington, Howard, Brinkmann, J., Ebelke, Garrett, Frinchaboy, Peter M., Kinemuchi, Karen, Malanushenko, Elena, Malanushenko, Viktor, Marchante, Moses, Oravetz, Daniel, Pan, Kaike, and Simmons, Audrey
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
APOGEE has amassed the largest ever collection of multi-epoch, high-resolution (R~22,500), H-band spectra for B-type emission line (Be) stars. The 128/238 APOGEE Be stars for which emission had never previously been reported serve to increase the total number of known Be stars by ~6%. We focus on identification of the H-band lines and analysis of the emission peak velocity separations (v_p) and emission peak intensity ratios (V/R) of the usually double-peaked H I and non-hydrogen emission lines. H I Br11 emission is found to preferentially form in the circumstellar disks at an average distance of ~2.2 stellar radii. Increasing v_p toward the weaker Br12--Br20 lines suggests these lines are formed interior to Br11. By contrast, the observed IR Fe II emission lines present evidence of having significantly larger formation radii; distinctive phase lags between IR Fe II and H I Brackett emission lines further supports that these species arise from different radii in Be disks. Several emission lines have been identified for the first time including ~16895, a prominent feature in the spectra for almost a fifth of the sample and, as inferred from relatively large v_p compared to the Br11-Br20, a tracer of the inner regions of Be disks. Unlike the typical metallic lines observed for Be stars in the optical, the H-band metallic lines, such as Fe II 16878, never exhibit any evidence of shell absorption, even when the H I lines are clearly shell-dominated. The first known example of a quasi-triple-peaked Br11 line profile is reported for HD 253659, one of several stars exhibiting intra- and/or extra-species V/R and radial velocity variation within individual spectra. Br11 profiles are presented for all discussed stars, as are full APOGEE spectra for a portion of the sample., Comment: accepted in AJ
- Published
- 2014
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