The transition regions of Capella
1995; IOP Publishing; Volume: 442; Linguagem: Inglês
10.1086/175447
ISSN1538-4357
AutoresJeffrey L. Linsky, Brian E. Wood, P. G. Judge, Alexander Brown, C. Andrulis, T. R. Ayres,
Tópico(s)Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
Resumoview Abstract Citations (72) References (67) Co-Reads Similar Papers Volume Content Graphics Metrics Export Citation NASA/ADS The Transition Regions of Capella Linsky, Jeffrey L. ; Wood, Brian E. ; Judge, Philip ; Brown, Alexander ; Andrulis, Catherine ; Ayres, Thomas R. Abstract We have used the Goddard High Resolution Spectrometer (GHRS) to observe the spectoscopic binary system Capella (G8 III + G1 III). Exposures with the G140L, G140M, G160M, G200M, and echelle gratings provide emission line profiles with unprecedented signal-to-noise and spectral resolving power (lambda/Delta-lambda) up to 92,000. Multi-Gaussin fits to the line profiles show that the hotter star contributes 60%-70% of the total flux in the chromospheric O I and Mg II resonance lines, but about 90% of the flux in the Si III, Si IV, and C IV lines formed in the transition region at T less than or = 105 K. We find clear evidence that the emission lines from the hotter star are systemtically redshifted relative to the photosphere with Doppler shifts of 5 +/- 1 km/s for the +9 +/- 3 km/s in the chromospheric Mg II and O I lines, respectively, increasing to +24 +/- 5 km/s for the transition region Si IV 1393.8A line. The multi-Gaussian fits to permitted transition region lines of SI III, Si IV, C IV, and N V indicate the presence of three components: moderately broad lines formed in the transition region of the hotter star (component H), narrow lines formed in the transition region of the cooler star (component C), and very broad lines that we think are formed in microflares on the hotter star (component B). The He II 1640.4 A feature has an broad profile, which indicates that it is formed by collisional excitation primarily from the hotter star, and a weak narrow component that we interpret as due to radiative recombination on the cooler star. We observed spin-forbidden emission lines of C III), O III), Si III), O IV), O V), and S IV) that are sensitive to electron density. Fainter members of the O IV) multiplet and all of the S IV) lines have never before been seen in any star than the Sun. We determine electron densities in the transition regions of the Capella stars using lines ratios of O IV) lines and emission measure analysis. The emission measures are self-consistent only when the fluxes from each emitting component are considered separately. In particular, the transition region abundance distributions appear to be different on the two stars, and the spin-forbidden lines were not detected in the B component. The emission measures for component H (the G1 star) are consistent with a constant electron pressure (or hydrostatic equilibrium) transition region with Pe = 1015 + 0.1/cu cm K and possibly solar 'coronal' abundances. Publication: The Astrophysical Journal Pub Date: March 1995 DOI: 10.1086/175447 Bibcode: 1995ApJ...442..381L Keywords: Binary Stars; G Stars; Line Spectra; Magnesium Isotopes; Oxygen Isotopes; Plasma Layers; Silicon Isotopes; Stellar Coronas; Abundance; Electron Density (Concentration); Red Shift; Resonance Lines; Spectrum Analysis; Stellar Spectrophotometry; Temperature Distribution; Astronomy; LINE: PROFILES; STARS: BINARIES: CLOSE; STARS: CORONAE; STARS: INDIVIDUAL CONSTELLATION NAME: ALPHA AURIGAE; ULTRAVIOLET: STARS full text sources ADS | data products SIMBAD (8) MAST (1) ESA (1)
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