scholarly journals Modeling of the Be Stars

2011 ◽  
Vol 7 (S282) ◽  
pp. 261-262 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Šejnová ◽  
V. Votruba ◽  
P. Koubský

AbstractThe Be stars are still a big unknown in respect to the origin and geometry of the circumstellar disk around the star. Program shellspec is designed to solve the simple radiative transfer along the line of sight in three-dimensional moving media. Our goal was to develop an effective method to search in parameter space, which can allow us to find a good estimate of the physical parameters of the disk. We also present here our results for Be star 60 Cyg using the modified code.

2000 ◽  
Vol 175 ◽  
pp. 656-667 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.J. Coe

AbstractThis paper will review the status of our observations and understanding of Be stars in X-ray binary systems. In virtually all cases the binary partner to the Be star is a neutron star. The circumstellar disk provides the accretion fuel and hence stimulates the X-ray emission, whilst the neutron star provides a valuable probe of the environment around the Be star. The results coming from studies of such systems are helping in our understanding of the Be phenomenon.


2020 ◽  
Vol 636 ◽  
pp. A110 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. S. G. de Almeida ◽  
A. Meilland ◽  
A. Domiciano de Souza ◽  
P. Stee ◽  
D. Mourard ◽  
...  

Aims. We present a detailed visible and near-infrared spectro-interferometric analysis of the Be-shell star o Aquarii from quasi-contemporaneous CHARA/VEGA and VLTI/AMBER observations. Methods. We analyzed spectro-interferometric data in the Hα (VEGA) and Brγ (AMBER) lines using models of increasing complexity: simple geometric models, kinematic models, and radiative transfer models computed with the 3D non-LTE code HDUST. Results. We measured the stellar radius of o Aquarii in the visible with a precision of 8%: 4.0 ± 0.3 R⊙. We constrained the circumstellar disk geometry and kinematics using a kinematic model and a MCMC fitting procedure. The emitting disk sizes in the Hα and Brγ lines were found to be similar, at ~10–12 stellar diameters, which is uncommon since most results for Be stars indicate a larger extension in Hα than in Brγ. We found that the inclination angle i derived from Hα is significantly lower (~15°) than the one derived from Brγ: i ~ 61.2° and 75.9°, respectively. While the two lines originate from a similar region of the disk, the disk kinematics were found to be near to the Keplerian rotation (i.e., β = −0.5) in Brγ (β ~ −0.43), but not in Hα (β ~ −0.30). After analyzing all our data using a grid of HDUST models (BeAtlas), we found a common physical description for the circumstellar disk in both lines: a base disk surface density Σ0 = 0.12 g cm−2 and a radial density law exponent m = 3.0. The same kind of discrepancy, as with the kinematic model, is found in the determination of i using the BeAtlas grid. The stellar rotational rate was found to be very close (~96%) to the critical value. Despite being derived purely from the fit to interferometric data, our best-fit HDUST model provides a very reasonable match to non-interferometric observables of o Aquarii: the observed spectral energy distribution, Hα and Brγ line profiles, and polarimetric quantities. Finally, our analysis of multi-epoch Hα profiles and imaging polarimetry indicates that the disk structure has been (globally) stable for at least 20 yr. Conclusions. Looking at the visible continuum and Brγ emission line only, o Aquarii fits in the global scheme of Be stars and their circumstellar disk: a (nearly) Keplerian rotating disk well described by the viscous decretion disk (VDD) model. However, the data in the Hα line shows a substantially different picture that cannot fully be understood using the current generation of physical models of Be star disks. The Be star o Aquarii presents a stable disk (close to the steady-state), but, as in previous analyses, the measured m is lower than the standard value in the VDD model for the steady-state regime (m = 3.5). This suggests that some assumptions of this model should be reconsidered. Also, such long-term disk stability could be understood in terms of the high rotational rate that we measured for this star, the rate being a main source for the mass injection in the disk. Our results on the stellar rotation and disk stability are consistent with results in the literature showing that late-type Be stars are more likely to be fast rotators and have stable disks.


1982 ◽  
Vol 98 ◽  
pp. 247-251
Author(s):  
P. Persi ◽  
M. Ferrari-Toniolo ◽  
G.L. Grasdalen

Preliminary results of our infrared observations from 2.3 up to 10 and 20 microns of the Be-X-ray stars X Per, γ Cas and HDE 245770, indicate the presence of an ionized circumstellar disk with an electron density law of the type ne ∝ r−3.5. x Per and γ Cas show besides, variable infrared excess at 10μ suggesting variability in the stellar wind. LS I+65°010 presents an anomalous infrared energy distribution for a Be star.


2013 ◽  
Vol 9 (S301) ◽  
pp. 465-466
Author(s):  
Coralie Neiner ◽  
Stéphane Mathis

AbstractThe Be phenomenon, i.e. the ejection of matter from Be stars into a circumstellar disk, has been a long lasting mystery. In the last few years, the CoRoT satellite brought clear evidence that Be outbursts are directly correlated to pulsations and rapid rotation. In particular the stochastic excitation of gravito-inertial modes, such as those detected by CoRoT in the hot Be star HD 51452, is enhanced thanks to rapid rotation. These waves increase the transport of angular momentum and help to bring the already rapid stellar rotation to its critical value at the surface, allowing the star to eject material. Below we summarize the recent observational and theoretical findings and describe the new picture of the Be phenomenon which arose from these results.


2019 ◽  
Vol 629 ◽  
pp. A24 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Pastor Yabar ◽  
J. M. Borrero ◽  
B. Ruiz Cobo

We present a numerical code that solves the forward and inverse problem of the polarized radiative transfer equation in geometrical scale under the Zeeman regime. The code is fully parallelized, making it able to easily handle large observational and simulated datasets. We checked the reliability of the forward and inverse modules through different examples. In particular, we show that even when properly inferring various physical parameters (temperature, magnetic field components, and line-of-sight velocity) in optical depth, their reliability in height-scale depends on the accuracy with which the gas-pressure or density are known. The code is made publicly available as a tool to solve the radiative transfer equation and perform the inverse solution treating each pixel independently. An important feature of this code, that will be exploited in the future, is that working in geometrical-scale allows for the direct calculation of spatial derivatives, which are usually required in order to estimate the gas pressure and/or density via the momentum equation in a three-dimensional volume, in particular the three-dimensional Lorenz force.


2004 ◽  
Vol 215 ◽  
pp. 515-524 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stanley P. Owocki

The characteristic signature of Be Stars is the Balmer line emission understood to arise in a circumstellar disk. Unlike the accretion disks of protostars or mass-exchange binary systems, the evolved and generally single or wide-binary status of Be Stars seems to require that its disk must form from mass ejection (a.k.a. decretion) from the star itself. In this paper, I use analogies with launching orbital satellites to discuss two candidate processes (radiation, pulsation) for driving such orbital mass ejection, with particular emphasis on the role of the rapid, possibly near-critical, rotation of Be Stars in facilitating the formation of their signature disks.


2000 ◽  
Vol 175 ◽  
pp. 236-239
Author(s):  
L.A. Balona ◽  
D. James

AbstractThe Be star 28 CMa was one of the first periodic Be stars to be discovered and shows very large line profile variations with a period of 1.37 d. Recently, it has been shown that the line profile and light variations can be modeled by a patch of gas suspended above the photosphere. We present echelle observations of the Hβ and Hϒ line and several helium and metal absorption lines. We show that the radial velocity variations of these lines are unchanged since they were first observed two decades ago. We also examined several emission lines of Fe II and show that they do not partake of the periodic variation. We attribute the periodic variations of the lines formed close to the photosphere to a co-rotating cloud, whereas the Fe II emission lines are formed in the circumstellar disk outside the co-rotating radius.


1994 ◽  
Vol 162 ◽  
pp. 378-379
Author(s):  
T. Kogure ◽  
S. Suzuki ◽  
M. Mon

We consider the formation of the Balmer emission lines and the decrement Hα/Hβ/Hγ, by solving the non-LTE problems in elementary regions of the envelope divided by equal line-of-sight velocities. These envelope-elements are characterized by different optical depths in the Balmer lines and by different dilution factors for the incident stellar radiation. It is shown that the decrements sensitively depend on these parameters of the envelope-elements. We show that the observed spectral-type dependence and large scatter of the decrements among Be stars can be explained in terms of the variation of these physical parameters.


2010 ◽  
Vol 6 (S272) ◽  
pp. 545-546
Author(s):  
Rachael M. Roettenbacher ◽  
M. Virginia McSwain

AbstractNonradial pulsations (NRPs) are a possible formation mechanism for the equatorial disks surrounding Be stars. The open cluster NGC 3766 has a high fraction of transient Be stars, Be stars that have been observed with both emission due to a circumstellar disk and a non-emitting B-type spectrum. Because of the large fraction of transient Be stars, this cluster is a prime location for studying the formation mechanisms of Be star disks. We observed NGC 3766 for more than 25 nights over three years to generate Strömgren uvby light curves of the Be population. We present the results of a period search to investigate the presence of NRPs.


2004 ◽  
Vol 221 ◽  
pp. 313-319
Author(s):  
Motohide Tamura ◽  
Misato Fukagawa ◽  
Masahiko Hayashi ◽  

A cold near-infrared stellar coronagraph combined with adaptive optics (CIAO) is introduced. As an open-use instrument on the Subaru 8.2-m telescope, it has been used for several star formation studies with high spatial resolutions (from natural seeing of about 0.6 arcsec down to 0.07 arcsec with adaptive optics). A brief explanation is described of the instrument as well as its current main project of systematic surveys of disks and young companions around T Tauri stars and Herbig Ae/Be stars. In particular, observations of HL Tau are presented in some details. Our images of HL Tau show several new circumstellar features including the presence of a red H - K color region of ∼150 AU, probably corresponding to the small circumstellar disk. The observations of a high density stellar cluster of MWC 137 are also reported. It appears to be a cluster of very low-mass stars around Herbig Be star or a cluster of B stars around a super giant.


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