Bibcode
Lobel, A.; Dupree, A. K.; Stefanik, R. P.; Torres, G.; Israelian, G.; de Jager, C.; Nieuwenhuijzen, H.; Ilyin, I.
Referencia bibliográfica
American Astronomical Society, 199th AAS Meeting, #158.02; Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society, Vol. 34, p.567
Fecha de publicación:
12
2001
Número de citas
0
Número de citas referidas
0
Descripción
An exceptional variability phase occurred in the peculiar F-type
hypergiant ρ Cas (Ia+) when the V brightness dimmed by about a full
magnitude between June and September 2000. The star recovered from this
deep minimum by April 2001. It is the third outburst of ρ Cas on
record in the last century. We detect the formation of TiO bands in
high-resolution spectra obtained from our long-term monitoring campaigns
over the past decade with the Utrecht Echelle Spectrograph on the
William Herschel Telescope, and the Sofin spectrograph of the Nordic
Optical Telescope (La Palma). Optical and near-IR TiO bandheads, i.e.
from the γ -system 0-0 transition at 7050 Å, develop in the
summer of 2000. TiO formed before the deep V minimum occurred, and a
first analysis shows that during the descending portion of the light
curve, the spectrum is a peculiar mixture of a F-type supergiant, with
TiO bands that characterize the spectra of M-type stars. This phenomenon
has also been observed during the outbursts of 1945-47 and 1985-86. A
preliminary analysis of these exceptional spectra is presented, by
comparing them with high-resolution optical spectra of the early M-type
supergiants μ Cep (Ia) and Betelgeuse (Iab). Central emission is
observed above the local continuum level in the split Na D lines. An
analysis of ρ Cas' optical emission line spectrum is provided in
Lobel 1997, Pulsation and Atmospherical Instability of Luminous F- and
G-type Stars, Maastricht: Shaker. We propose the formation of a
low-temperature, optically thick, mass shell, caused by instability of
the upper atmosphere of this pulsating massive supergiant near the
Eddington luminosity limit (Lobel 2001, ApJ, 558, 780). A review is at
http://xxx.lanl.gov/format/astro-ph/0108358 This research is supported
in part by STScI grant GO-08280.02-97A to the SAO.