4.7 Article

DETECTION OF A HOT SUBDWARF COMPANION TO THE Be STAR FY CANIS MAJORIS

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 686, Issue 2, Pages 1280-1291

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/591145

Keywords

binaries: spectroscopic; stars: emission-line, Be; stars: evolution; stars: individual (HR 2855, HD 58978, FY CMa); subdwarfs

Funding

  1. NASA [NAS5-26555, NAG5-7584]
  2. National Science Foundation [AST 06-06861]
  3. University System of Georgia
  4. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien
  5. Division Of Astronomical Sciences [0750898] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The rapid rotation of Be stars may be caused in some cases by past mass and angular momentum accretion in an interacting binary in which the mass donor is currently viewed as a small, hot subdwarf stripped of its outer envelope. Here we report on the spectroscopic detection of such a subdwarf in the Be binary system FY Canis Majoris from the analysis of data acquired by the IUE spacecraft and KPNO Coude Feed Telescope over the course of 16 and 21 yr, respectively. We present a double-lined spectroscopic orbit for the binary based on radial velocities from the IUE spectra and use the orbital solutions with a Doppler tomography algorithm to reconstruct the components' UV spectra. The subdwarf is hot (T-eff = 45 +/- 5 kK) and has a mass of about 1.3 M-circle dot and a radius of about 0.6 R-circle dot. It contributes about 4% as much flux as the Be star does in the FUV. We also present observations of the H alpha and He I lambda 6678 emission features that are formed in the circumstellar disk of the Be star. Orbital flux and velocity variations in the He I lambda 6678 profile indicate that much of the emission forms along the disk rim facing the hot subdwarf where the disk is probably heated by the incident radiation from the subdwarf. A study of the FUV infall shell lines discovered in the 1980s confirms their episodic presence but reveals that they tend to be found around both quadrature phases, unlike the pattern in Algol binaries. Phase-dependent variations in the UV N v doublet suggest the presence of a N-enhanced wind from the subdwarf and a possible shock-interaction region between the stars where the subdwarf's wind collides with the disk of the Be star.

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