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The Thermal Structure of the Circumstellar Disk Surrounding the Classical Be Star gamma Cassiopeia

Authors :
C. E. Jones
T. A. A. Sigut
Publication Year :
2007
Publisher :
arXiv, 2007.

Abstract

We have computed radiative equilibrium models for the gas in the circumstellar envelope surrounding the hot, classical Be star $\gamma $Cassiopeia. This calculation is performed using a code that incorporates a number of improvements over previous treatments of the disk's thermal structure by \citet{mil98} and \citet{jon04}; most importantly, heating and cooling rates are computed with atomic models for H, He, CNO, Mg, Si, Ca, & Fe and their relevant ions. Thus, for the first time, the thermal structure of a Be disk is computed for a gas with a solar chemical composition as opposed to assuming a pure hydrogen envelope. We compare the predicted average disk temperature, the total energy loss in H$\alpha$, and the near-IR excess with observations and find that all can be accounted for by a disk that is in vertical hydrostatic equilibrium with a density in the equatorial plane of $\rho(R)\approx 3$ to $5\cdot 10^{-11} (R/R_*)^{-2.5} \rm g cm^{-3}$. We also discuss the changes in the disk's thermal structure that result from the additional heating and cooling processes available to a gas with a solar chemical composition over those available to a pure hydrogen plasma.<br />Comment: 11 pages, 8 figures high resolution figures available at http://inverse.astro.uwo.ca/sig_jon07.html

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....506e044e2ee00a596276cbb1a1b62a24
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.0706.4036