4.6 Article

FUSE observations of HD 5980:: The wind structure of the eruptor

Journal

ASTRONOMICAL JOURNAL
Volume 132, Issue 4, Pages 1527-1538

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/506966

Keywords

binaries : eclipsing; stars : individual (HD 5980); stars : winds, outflows; stars : Wolf-Rayet

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HD 5980 is a unique system containing one massive star ( star A) that is apparently entering the luminous blue variable phase and an eclipsing companion ( star B) that may have already evolved beyond this phase to become a Wolf-Rayet star. In this paper we present the results from FUSE observations obtained in 1999, 2000, and 2002, and one far-UV observation obtained by ORFEUS BEFS in 1993 shortly before the first eruption of HD 5980. The eight phase-resolved spectra obtained by FUSE in 2002 are analyzed in the context of a wind-eclipse model. This analysis shows that the wind of the eruptor obeyed a very fast velocity law in 2002, which is consistent with the line-driving mechanism. Large-amplitude line-profile variations on the orbital period are shown to be due to the eclipse of star B by the wind of star A, although the eclipse due to gas flowing in the direction of star B is absent. This can only be explained if the wind of star A is not spherically symmetric or if the eclipsed line radiation is filled in'' by emission originating from somewhere else in the system, e. g., in the wind-wind collision region. Except for a slightly lower wind speed, the ORFEUS BEFS spectrum is very similar to the spectrum obtained by FUSE at the same orbital phase; there is no indication of the impending eruption. However, the trend for decreasing wind velocity suggests the occurrence of the bistability'' mechanism, which in turn implies that the restructuring of the circumbinary environment caused by the transition from fast, rarefied wind to slow, dense wind was observed as the eruptive event. The underlying mechanism responsible for the long-term decrease in wind velocity that precipitated this change remains an open issue.

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