Bibcode
Lobel, A.; Dupree, A. K.; Stefanik, R. P.; Torres, G.; Israelian, G.; Morrison, N.; Ilyin, I.; de Jager, C.; Nieuwenhuijzen, H.
Bibliographical reference
American Astronomical Society, 201st AAS Meeting, #49.09; Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society, Vol. 34, p.1185
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12
2002
Citations
0
Refereed citations
0
Description
We report the largest mass-loss rate of ~5 % of the solar mass per year,
directly observed in any stellar object so far during the recent
outburst of the Yellow Hypergiant ρ Cas. In the fall of 2000, the
enigmatic cool luminous supergiant dimmed by more than a full visual
magnitude, thereby changing its spectral type form early F- to early
M-type. Our spectral monitoring reveals that the effective temperature
decreased by more than 3000 K during the event, from above 7000 K to
below 4000 K in less than ~200 days. It is the third outburst of ρ
Cas on record in the last century. The optical spectrum becomes
comparable to that of the red supergiant Betelgeuse, and reveals
strongly blue-shifted molecular absorption bands of titanium-oxide
(TiO). We determine from the newly formed TiO bands a gas mass-loss rate
of the same order of magnitude as has been proposed for the giant
outbursts of the Luminous Blue Variable η Carinae. The outburst of
ρ Cas produces an outward propagating circumstellar shock wave,
driven by recombination of hydrogen gas in its wake, resulting in a
tremendous cooling of the entire outer atmosphere. Over the past 18
months since the outburst we observe a very prominent inverse P Cygni
profile in Balmer Hα . Strong emission in this line has not before
been observed in ρ Cas over this long period of time. The optical
spectroscopic monitoring signals an unusal strong collapse of the upper
Hα atmosphere, which we also observed in the months before the
outburst event. The recent observations may therefore signal that a new
and stronger outburst of ρ Cas is imminent. This reseach has been
supported in part by a Space Telescope Science Institute grant to the
Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory.