On the determination of the rotational oblateness of Achernar


Autoria(s): CARCIOFI, A. C.; SOUZA, A. Domiciano de; MAGALHAES, A. M.; BJORKMAN, J. E.; VAKILI, F.
Contribuinte(s)

UNIVERSIDADE DE SÃO PAULO

Data(s)

18/04/2012

18/04/2012

2008

Resumo

The recent interferometric study of Achernar, leading to the conclusion that its geometrical oblateness cannot be explained by the Roche approximation, has stirred substantial interest in the community, in view of its potential impact on many fields of stellar astrophysics. It is the purpose of this Letter to reinterpret the interferometric observations with a fast-rotating, gravity-darkened central star surrounded by a small equatorial disk, whose presence is consistent with contemporaneous spectroscopic data. We find that we can fit the available data only assuming a critically rotating central star. We identified two different disk models that simultaneously fit the spectroscopic, polarimetric, and interferometric observational constraints: a tenuous disk in hydrostatic equilibrium (i.e., with small scale height) and a smaller, scale height enhanced disk. We believe that these relatively small disks correspond to the transition region between the photosphere and the circumstellar environment and that they are probably perturbed by some photospheric mechanism. The study of this interface between photosphere and circumstellar disk for near-critical rotators is crucial to our understanding of the Be phenomenon and the mass and angular momentum loss of stars in general. This work shows that it is nowadays possible to directly study this transition region from simultaneous multitechnique observations.

Identificador

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS, v.676, n.1, p.L41-L44, 2008

2041-8213

http://producao.usp.br/handle/BDPI/15610

10.1086/586895

http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/586895

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS

Relação

Astrophysical Journal Letters

Direitos

closedAccess

Copyright UNIV CHICAGO PRESS

Palavras-Chave #polarization #stars : emission-line, Be #stars : individual (Achernar) #techniques : interferometric #techniques : spectroscopic #STAR ACHERNAR #CIRCUMSTELLAR ACTIVITY #DISK #Astronomy & Astrophysics
Tipo

article

original article

publishedVersion