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Photospheric and stellar wind variability in ϵOri (B0 Ia)

Authors :
Salvatore Orlando
Otmar Stahl
Raman K. Prinja
Bernard Foing
Jan Cami
Th. Rivinius
Andreas Kaufer
Source :
Astronomy & Astrophysics. 418:727-736
Publication Year :
2004
Publisher :
EDP Sciences, 2004.

Abstract

We provide direct observational evidence for a link between photospheric activity and perturbations in the dense inner-most stellar wind regions of the B supergiant starOri. The results, which are relevant to our understanding of the origin of wind structure, are based on a multi-spectral line analysis of optical time-series data secured in 1998 using the HEROS spectrograph on the ESO Dutch 0.9-m telescope in La Silla. A period of ∼1.9 days is consistently identified in Balmer, He  absorption, and weak metal lines such as Si  and C . The primary characteristic is a large-amplitude swaying of the central absorption trough of the line, with differential velocities in lines formed at varying depths in the atmosphere. The variance resulting from the "S-wave" velocity behaviour of the lines is constrained within ± the projected rotation velocity (∼80 km s −1 ) in the weakest absorption lines, but extends blue-ward to over −200 km s −1 in Hα. A second (superimposed) 1.9 day signal is present at more extended blue-ward velocities (to ∼−300 km s −1 ) in lines containing stronger circumstellar components. Inspection of archival optical data from 1996 provides evidence that this modulation signal has persisted for at least 2.5 years. Non-radial pulsational modelling is carried out in an attempt to reproduce the key observational characteristics of the line profile variability. Only limited success is obtained with prograde (m = −1) modes. The principal S-wave pattern cannot be matched by these models and remains enigmatic.

Details

ISSN :
14320746 and 00046361
Volume :
418
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Astronomy & Astrophysics
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........6053222c7adf51297c873bcd015fe03e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361:20035638