* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download presentation
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Temporal variations of the circumstellar environment of the Mira star V Oph Keiichi Ohnaka Max-Planck-Institut für Radioastronomie ESO Santiago Seminar 10 January 2008 Asymptotic Giant Branch (AGB) To Planetary Nebulae AGB Late evolutionary stage of low- & intermediate mass stars (1-8 M8 ) Teff ~ 3000K L ~ 103 -- 104 L8 3M8 1M8 ~2 Rstar = ~600--800 R8(3--4AU) ~200--400 R8(~1AU = Earth’s Orbital Radius) ~0.01--0.1 R8 (~Earth’s radius) Stellar surface Hydrogen shell burning 4 H He Circumstellar shell Mass loss, Dust formation Photosphere C/O core Convective mixing He H Helium shell burning (3 4He 12C) Thermally unstable, run-away reaction “Thermal pulse” or “Helium shell flash” Carbon mixed up to surface by convection O-rich photosphere C-rich (“Carbon Star”) To interstellar space Why AGB stars are important? 1. Majority of the stellar population 2. Nucleosynthesized material mixed to the stellar surface O-rich photosphere C-rich photosphere “Carbon stars” (C2, CN, HCN, C2H2 features in optical/IR spectra) s-process elements (Ba, La, Eu, Tc, etc) 3. Enrichment of ISM via mass loss Major “Dust Factory”, together with supernovae Mass loss mechanism in AGB stars Carbon star, IRC+10216 H AGB, CIT3 Post-AGB Red Rectangle 200mas AGB K 100mas J AGB, AFGL2290 PN, Cat’s Eye Nebula K 50mas 100mas Driving mechanism not well understood Mass-loss rates = 10-8—10-5 M8/yr Dust & Molecule forming region close to the star Morphology change from AGB to planetary nebulae How and at what stage? High Angular Resolution IR interferometry How an IR interferometer works Spatial resolution ~ l/Bp N band (8—13 mm) Bp = 50 m 20 mas 200 m 5 mas Optical Path Difference Bp B K band (2 mm) Bp = 50 m 4 mas 200 m 1 mas Diffraction Limit (8m) N band 0.3” K band 60 mas Beam combiner 2 Telescopes Only visibility (Amplitude of Fourier transform of I(x,y) Delay line to compensate OPD 3 Telescopes Imaging OK, but not easy IR interferometry of Mira stars Mira variables: Large variability amplitude ~ 9 mag (in V) Expanding dust shell “Warm Molecular layers”, or “MOLsphere”, 1000—2000K, 2—5 Rstar Dust formation Photosphere Spectro-interferometry Spatial + Spectral resolution Mid-IR (N band) MIDI Near-IR (JHK) AMBER MIDI observation Spectrally dispersed fringes extracted from raw data 13.3 mm 8.0 mm MIDI + VINCI observations of O-rich Mira RR Sco Dust emission H2O+SiO emission Stellar continuum size (Photospheric size) MOLsphere (H2O, SiO, CO) Photosphere Dust shell Multi-epoch MIDI observations of the C-rich Mira star V Oph O-rich Mira stars Warm molecular layers (H2O, SiO) Spectroscopy + Interferometry 1000--1700K, 2--3 Rstar Optically thick (tline ~1000) C-rich Mira stars Circumstellar material close to the star Dust or gas ? (or both?) Little mid-IR interferometry on optically bright (=not so dusty) C-rich Miras V Oph C 2H 2 n4 + n5 band (< 9 mm) n5 band (> 11 mm) Dust Amorphous Carbon SiC (11.3 mm) MIDI Spectro-interferometry Multi-epoch MIDI observations of the C-rich Mira star V Oph UT2-UT3 UT2-UT4 UT1-UT4 Same Bp & P.A. N-band visibilities show temporal variations Temporal variation of 8—13mm angular size of V Oph N-band Uniform Disk Diameter Estimated photospheric size The object appears the smallest at minimum light (when faintest). N-band angular sizes are remarkably larger than the star itself. Interpretation of MIDI data on V Oph (1) Dust shell model Dust Shell Modeling Optically thin dust shell (Amorphous carbon + SiC) Monte Carlo code (Ohnaka et al. 2006) Expanding dust shell SED + N-band Visibility fitting Dust shell Amorphous carbon (featureless) + SiC (11.3 mm) Inner boundary = 2.5 Rstar Tdust = 1600K Condensation Temperature Dust shell model compared to MIDI observations N-band Uniform Disk Diameter Estimated photospheric size N-band spectra Phase 0.18 Phase 0.49 Phase 0.65 C2H2 n4 + n5 band SiC C2H2 n5 band Interpretation of MIDI data on V Oph (2): C2H2 layers + dust shell (Ohnaka et al. 2007, A&A, 466, 1099) (ad hoc) Modeling Hot and cool C2H2 layers (constant temperatures, densities) Line opacity calculated analytically (Band model, Tsuji 1984) Expanding dust shell Optically thick emission from C2H2 n4 + n5 band (< 9 mm) n5 band (> 11 mm) C2H2 gas Optically thin dust shell (Amorphous carbon + SiC) Monte Carlo code (Ohnaka et al. 2006) Dust shell Amorphous carbon (featureless) + SiC (11.3 mm) Inner boundary = 2.5 Rstar Tdust = 1600K Condensation Temperature Modeling for 3 epochs Optically thick emission from C2H2 Angular size larger ( < 9 mm & > 12 mm) Extended, dense C2H2 layers in C-rich Mira stars H2O layers in O-rich Mira stars Model for post-maximum (phase = 0.18) Photospheric size Phase dependence of the C2H2 layers and the dust shell C2H2 Column Density C2H2 Radius Dust Optical Depth How to explain the phase dependence Series of “snapshots” of a dynamical atmosphere (shock wave passage), Nowotny et al. (2005) dM/dt = 10-6 M8/yr Post-Maximum dM/dt = 10-8 M8/yr (V Oph) C2H2 layers: dense, extended Dust opacity: high Minimum Shock front C 2H 2 formation Dust formation Diluted C2H2 layers: less dense, small Dust opacity: low Diluted Post-Minimum C 2H 2 formation C2H2 layers: dense, extended Dust opacity: high New dust formation Conclusion & Outlook C-rich version of the warm molecular layers (C2H2) Phase dependence of the mid-IR angular size: The object appears the smallest at minimum light. Observed N-band visibilities and spectra can be explained by the C2H2 layers + dust shell model. Dust formation zone not well constrained (baselines were too long). Better (u,v) coverage with ATs. O-rich Miras: MIDI/AT program on 3 Miras C-rich Miras: MIDI+VISIR+AMBER program on 1 Mira Non-Mira AGB stars (majority of AGB stars) Very small variability amplitudes, but substantial mass loss Temporal variation of N-band angular size of V Oph N-band Uniform Disk Diameter UT2-UT3 UT2-UT4 UT1-UT4 Estimated photospheric size N-band spectra Phase 0.18 Phase 0.49 Phase 0.65 C2H2 n4 + n5 band SiC C2H2 n5 band MIDI + VINCI observations of O-rich Mira RR Sco Dust emission H2O+SiO emission Stellar continuum size Warm molecular layer makes the star appear larger in MIR than in NIR ~1400K, 2.3 R*, column densities = 1020--1021 cm-2 (Large-amplitude pulsation may explain the formation of warm H2O layers) Dust shell emission is responsible for the size increase beyond 10 mm Inner radius = 7--8 R*, Tin = 700--800 K, silicate 20%, corundum 80%