4.6 Article

Relating jet structure to photometric variability: the Herbig Ae star HD 163296

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 563, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/201323092

Keywords

stars: formation; circumstellar matter; stars: variables: T Tauri, Herbig Ae/Be; ISM: jets and outflows; Herbig-Haro objects; stars: individual: HD 163296

Funding

  1. Netherlands Research School for Astronomy (NOVA)
  2. NASA ADP [NNH06CC28C, NNX09AC73G]
  3. IR&D program at The Aerospace Corporation
  4. FP7 Intra-European Marie Curie Fellowship [PIEF-GA-2009-253896]

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Herbig Ae/Be stars are intermediate-mass pre-main sequence stars surrounded by circumstellar dust disks. Some are observed to produce jets, whose appearance as a sequence of shock fronts (knots) suggests a past episodic outflow variability. This jet fossil record can be used to reconstruct the outflow history. We present the first optical to near-infrared (NIR) spectra of the jet from the Herbig Ae star HD 163296, obtained with VLT/X-shooter. We determine the physical conditions in the knots and also their kinematic launch epochs. Knots are formed simultaneously on either side of the disk, with a regular interval of similar to 16 yr. The velocity dispersion versus jet velocity and the energy input are comparable between both lobes. However, the mass-loss rate, velocity, and shock conditions are asymmetric. We find. (M) over dot(jet)/(M) over dot(acc) similar to 0.01-0.1, which is consistent with magneto-centrifugal jet launching models. No evidence of any dust is found in the high-velocity jet, suggesting a launch region within the sublimation radius (<0.5 au). The jet inclination measured from proper motions and radial velocities confirms that it is perpendicular to the disk. A tentative relation is found between the structure of the jet and the photometric variability of the central source. Episodes of NIR brightening were previously detected and attributed to a dusty disk wind. We report for the first time significant optical fadings lasting from a few days up to a year, coinciding with the NIR brightenings. These are very likely caused by dust lifted high above the disk plane, and this supports the disk wind scenario. The disk wind is launched at a larger radius than the high-velocity atomic jet, although their outflow variability may have a common origin. No significant relation between outflow and accretion variability could be established. Our findings confirm that this source undergoes periodic ejection events, which may be coupled with dust ejections above the disk plane.

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