4.7 Article

UBIQUITOUS Hα-POLARIZED LINE PROFILES: ABSORPTIVE SPECTROPOLARIMETRIC EFFECTS AND TEMPORAL VARIABILITY IN POST-AGB, HERBIG Ae/Be, AND OTHER STELLAR TYPES

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 695, Issue 1, Pages 238-247

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/695/1/238

Keywords

circumstellar matter; stars: AGB and post-AGB; stars: emission line, Be; techniques: polarimetric

Funding

  1. NSF [AST-0123390]
  2. University of Hawaii
  3. AirForce Research Labs (AFRL)
  4. Canadian Space Agency

Ask authors/readers for more resources

We show here that the absorptive H alpha polarized line profile previously seen in many Herbig Ae/Be (HAeBe) stars is a nearly ubiquitous feature of other types of embedded or obscured stars. This characteristic 1% linear polarization variation across the absorptive part of the H alpha line is seen in post-AGB stars as well as RV Tau, delta Scuti, and other types. Each of these stars shows evidence of obscuration by intervening circumstellar hydrogen gas and the polarization effect is in the absorptive component, consistent with an optical pumping model. We present ESPaDOnS spectropolarimetric observations of nine post-AGB and RV Tau types in addition to many multi-epoch HiVIS observations of these targets. We find significant polarization changes across the H alpha line in 8/9 stars with polarization amplitudes of 0.5% to over 3% (5/6 post-AGB and 3/3 RV Tau). In all but one of these, the polarization change is dominated by the absorptive component of the line profile. There is no evidence that subclasses of obscured stars showing stellar pulsations (RV Tau for post-AGB stars and delta Scuti for Herbig Ae/Be stars) show significant spectropolarimetric differences from the main class. Significant temporal variability is evident from both HiVIS and ESPaDOnS data for several stars presented here: 89 Her, AC Her, SS Lep, MWC 120, AB Aurigae, and HD144668. The morphologies and temporal variability are comparable to existing large samples of Herbig Ae/Be and Be type stars. Since post-AGB stars have circumstellar gas that is very different from Be stars, we discuss these observations in the context of their differing environments.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available