2002ApJ...575..435R


Query : 2002ApJ...575..435R

2002ApJ...575..435R - Astrophys. J., 575, 435-448 (2002/August-2)

X-ray and optical variations in the classical Be star γ Cassiopeia: the discovery of a possible magnetic dynamo.

ROBINSON R.D., SMITH M.A. and HENRY G.W.

Abstract (from CDS):

The classical B0.5e star γ Cassiopeia is known to be a unique X-ray source by virtue of its moderate LX (1033 ergs.s–1), hard X-ray spectrum, and light curve punctuated by ubiquitous flares and slow undulations. The peculiarities of this star have led to a controversy concerning the origin of these emissions: whether they are from wind infall onto a putative degenerate companion, as in the case of normal Be/X-ray binaries, or from the Be star itself. Recently, much progress has been made to resolve this question: (1) the discovery that γ Cas is a moderately eccentric binary system (P=203.59 days) with unknown secondary type, (2) the addition of RXTE observations at six epochs in 2000, adding to three others in 1996-1998, and (3) the collation of robotic telescope (Automated Photometric Telescope) B- and V-band photometric observations over four seasons that show a 3%, cyclical flux variation with cycle lengths of 55-93 days. We find that X-ray fluxes at all nine epochs show random variations with orbital phase, thereby contradicting the binary accretion model, which predicts a substantial modulation. However, these fluxes correlate well with the cyclical optical variations. In particular, the six flux measurements in 2000, which vary by a factor of 3, closely track the interpolated optical variations between the 2000 and 2001 observing seasons. The energy associated with the optical variations greatly exceeds the energy in the X-rays, so that the optical variability cannot simply be due to reprocessing of X-ray flux. However, the strong correlation between the two suggests that they are driven by a common mechanism. We propose that this mechanism is a cyclical magnetic dynamo excited by a Balbus-Hawley instability located within the inner part of the circumstellar disk. According to our model, variations in the field strength directly produce the changes in the magnetically related X-ray activity. Turbulence associated with the dynamo results in changes to the density (and therefore the emission measure) distribution within the disk and creates the observed optical variations.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): Stars: Circumstellar Matter - Stars: Emission-Line, Be - Stars: Flare - Stars: Individual: Constellation Name: γ Cassiopeiae - Ultraviolet: Stars - X-Rays: Stars

Simbad objects: 4

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Number of rows : 4
N Identifier Otype ICRS (J2000)
RA
ICRS (J2000)
DEC
Mag U Mag B Mag V Mag R Mag I Sp type #ref
1850 - 2024
#notes
1 * ups02 Cas Pe* 00 56 39.9051464088 +59 10 51.805287084   5.581 4.622     G8.5IIIbFe-0.5 222 0
2 * gam Cas HXB 00 56 42.5310945 +60 43 00.264089 1.18 2.29 2.39 2.32 2.40 B0.5IVpe 1211 0
3 HD 6210 PM* 01 04 19.4510863152 +61 34 48.662237964   6.386 5.833     F6V 82 0
4 HD 110432 HXB 12 42 50.2663572384 -63 03 31.052981412 4.79 5.58 5.31     B0.5IVpe 312 0

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