SIMBAD references

2010A&A...512A..73M - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 512, A73-73 (2010/3-1)

Resolving the dusty circumstellar environment of the A[e] supergiant HD 62623 with the VLTI/MIDI.

MEILLAND A., KANAAN S., BORGES FERNANDES M., CHESNEAU O., MILLOUR F., STEE P. and LOPEZ B.

Abstract (from CDS):

B[e] stars are hot stars surrounded by circumstellar gas and dust which is responsible for the presence of emission lines and IR-excess in their spectra. How dust can be formed in this highly illuminated and diluted environment remains an open issue. HD 62623 is one of the very few A-type supergiants showing the B[e] phenomenon. We studied the geometry of its circumstellar envelope in the mid-infrared using long-baseline interferometry, which is the only observing technique able to spatially resolve objects smaller than a few tens of milliarcseconds. We obtained nine calibrated visibility measurements between October 2006 and January 2008 using the VLTI/MIDI instrument in SCI-PHOT mode and PRISM spectral dispersion mode with projected baselines ranging from 13 to 71m and with various position angles (PA). We used geometrical models and physical modeling with a radiative transfer code to analyze these data. The dusty circumstellar environment of HD 62623 is partially resolved by the VLTI/MIDI, even with the shortest baselines. The environment is flattened (a/b∼1.3±0.1) and can be separated into two components: a compact one whose extension grows from 17mas at 8µm to 30mas at 9.6µm and stays almost constant up to 13µm, and a more extended one that is over-resolved even with the shortest baselines. Using the radiative transfer code MC3D, we managed to model HD 62623's circumstellar environment as a dusty disk with an inner radius of 3.85±0.6AU, an inclination angle of 60±10°, and a mass of 2x10–7M. It is the first time that the dusty disk inner rim of a supergiant star exhibiting the B[e] phenomenon is significantly constrained. The inner gaseous envelope likely contributes up to 20% to the total N band flux and acts like a reprocessing disk. Finally, the hypothesis of a stellar wind deceleration by the companion's gravitational effects remains the most probable case since the bi-stability mechanism does not seem to be efficient for this star.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): techniques: high angular resolution - techniques: interferometric - stars: emission-line, Be - stars: winds, outflows - stars: individual: HD 62623 - circumstellar matter

Simbad objects: 14

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