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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2013-08-31
    Description: Archival IUE high dispersion spectra of 42 B6-A2 stars within 200 pc were surveyed. Five of the program stars show significant C IV and Si IV absorption. All of the stars with detected C IV have v sin i less than or = 190 km/sec. Sharp absorption cores are present in Si II lambda 1533 in 3 of the objects, indicating that these are previously unrecognized shell stars. Three of the stars have variable or asymmetric C IV profiles which are consistent with the C IV and Si IV being produced in stellar winds. One star has C IV in the form of a shortward-shifted discrete absorption component, similar to those observed in Be stars. The data are compared with similar data for Be and B shell stars.
    Keywords: ASTRONOMY
    Type: ESA, A Decade of UV Astronomy with the IUE Satellite, Volume 1; p 397-400
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2013-08-31
    Description: Infall from the circumstellar envelope onto the bright B0.5 IVe star, HD 58978 was studied. The IUE data indicate that the star was surrounded by a low and moderately ionized circumstellar shell at least 12 times between 1979 and 1988. During 6 of these episodes, the signatures of cool circumstellar material were redshifted with respect to the photosphere by 20 to 80 km/sec. The data indicate that the transition from infall to minimal shell absorption can occur in under 10 days, and are consistent either with infall phases lasting up to 6 months, or with infall episodes shorter than 10 to 15 days. The long term behavior of the shell episodes is compared with variability in the stellar wind.
    Keywords: ASTRONOMY
    Type: ESA, A Decade of UV Astronomy with the IUE Satellite, Volume 1; p 257-260
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2013-08-29
    Description: A survey of the IUE archival spectra of Herbig Be stars, revealed 2 stars, HD 200775 and HD 259431, with winds which differ from those seen in more evolved stars and from the winds observed in the cooler Herbig Ae stars. The winds are strong, show a wide range of ionization from C IV to Mg II and Si II, and exhibit pronounced ionization gradients as a function of radial velocity. These winds are present at v sin i less than or = 100 km/sec, suggesting that winds from massive pre-main sequence Be stars extend to higher latitudes than those observed in more evolved stars. The presence of well-developed discrete absorption components, together with stronger winds than can be accounted for based on the stellar luminosity, suggests that mechanisms other than simple radiation pressure are important in initiating and driving stellar winds from these stars.
    Keywords: ASTRONOMY
    Type: ESA, Proceedings of the Celebratory Symposium on a Decade of UV Astronomy with the IUE Satellite, Volume 2; p 109-111
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Analysis of IUE high- and low-dispersion spectra of the young Herbig Ae star HR 5999 (HD 144668) covering 1978-1992 revealed dramatic changes in the Mg II h and k (2795.5, 2802.7 A) emission profiles, changes in the column density and distribution in radial velocity of accreting gas, and flux in the Ly(alpha), O I, and C IV emission lines, which are correlated with the UV excess luminosity. Variability in the spectral type inferred from the UV spectral energy distribution, ranging from A5 IV-III in high state to A7 III in the low state, was also observed. The trend of earlier inferred spectral type with decreasing wavelength and with increasing UV continuum flux has previously been noted as a signature of accretion disks in lower mass pre-main sequence stars (PMS) and in systems undergoing FU Orionis-type outbursts. Our data represent the first detection of similar phenomena in an intermediate mass (M greater than or equal to 2 solar mass) PMS star. Recent IUE spectra show gas accreting toward the star with velocities as high as plus 300 km/s, much as is seen toward beta Pic, and suggest that we also view this system through the debris disk. The absence of UV lines with the rotational broadening expected given the optical data (A7 IV, V sini=180 plus or minus 20 km/s for this system) also suggests that most of the UV light originates in the disk, even in the low continuum state. The dramatic variability in the column density of accreting gas, is consistent with clumpy accretion, such as has been observed toward beta Pic, is a hallmark of accretion onto young stars, and is not restricted to the clearing phase, since detectable amounts of accretion are present for stars with 0.5 Myr less than t(sub age) less than 2.8 Myr. The implications for models of beta Pic and similar systems are briefly discussed.
    Keywords: ASTRONOMY
    Type: NASA-CR-189314 , NAS 1.26:189314
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: We report detection of high velocity, accreting gas toward the Be star with IR excess and bipolar nebula, HD 45677. High velocity (+200 to +400 km/s), variable column density gas is visible in all IUE spectra from 1979-1992 in transitions of Si II, C II, Al III, Fe III, Si IV, and C IV. Low-velocity absorption profiles from low oscillator-strength transitions of Si II, Fe II, and Zn II exhibit double-peaked absorption profiles similar to those previously reported in optical spectra of FU Orionis objects. The UV absorption data, together with previously reported analyses of the IR excess and polarization of this object, suggest that HD 45677 is a massive, Herbig Be star with an actively accreting circumstellar, proto-planetary disk.
    Keywords: ASTRONOMY
    Type: NASA-CR-189312 , NAS 1.26:189312
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: We report recent IUE high- and low-dispersion observations with the IUE long wavelength camera (LWP) and short wavelength camera (SWP) of the Herbig Ae star HR 5999. We have found a dramatic change in the structure of the Mg II h and k lines (2795.5, 2802.7 A) along with some continuum flux excesses especially at the short end of the SWP camera. LWP high dispersion observations of HR 5999 obtained between 1979 and 1990, at times of comparatively low UV continuum fluxes, exhibit P Cygni type m profiles in the Mg II resonance doublet. In contrast, observations made from September 1990 through March 16-18, 1992, with high W continuum fluxes, present Mg II lines with reverse P Cygni profiles indicative of some active episodic accretion. Accreting gas can also be detected in the additional red wings of the various Fe II and Mn II absorption lines, with velocities up to +300-350 km/s (September 1990). By September 10, 1992 the Mg II profile had returned to the type III P Cygni profile similar to those from earlier spectra. The correlation between the presence of large column densities of accreting gas and the continuum light variations supports suggestions by several authors that HR 5999 is surrounded by an optically thick, viscously heated accretion disk. Detection of accreting gas in the line of sight to HR 5999 permits us to place constraints on our viewing geometry for this system. A discussion is included comparing the spectral and physical similarities between HR 5999 and the more evolved proto-planetary candidate system, beta Pictoris.
    Keywords: ASTRONOMY
    Type: NASA-CR-189313 , NAS 1.26:189313
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Archival and recent International Ultraviolet Explorer (IUE) high dispersion spectra of late B stars which reveal the presence of accreting gas with velocities as high as 350 km/s, collisional ionization of the accreting gas to temperatures above the stellar T(sub eff), and column densities intermediate between those observed toward classical Herbig Ae/Be stars and the nearby proto-planetary system beta Pictoris are presented. One of the stars HD 176386, while lacking obvious optical signatures of youth, is a member of the R CrA star formation region, and with an inferred age of 2.8 Myr has not yet arrived on the zero-age main sequence (ZAMS). The other object, an isolated, field B star with pronounced IR excess due to warm, circumstellar dust, 51 Oph, exhibits only modest H(alpha) emission. The combination of high velocity, accreting gas in systems with IR excesses due to circumstellar dust suggests that not only are these objects candidate proto-planetary systems, but that they may represent an extension to higher stellar masses of the weak-emission pre-main sequence (PMS) stars.
    Keywords: ASTRONOMY
    Type: NASA-TM-108256 , NAS 1.15:108256
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: Seven O stars known to have strong, and sometimes variable, stellar winds have been observed repeatedly with the Imaging Proportional Counter on the Einstein Observatory, in a program designed to determine whether the X-ray fluxes from these stars are variable. In three cases, definite changes were seen, either on a time scale of a year (Iota Ori and Delta Ori) or five days (15 Mon). In two of these cases, the X-ray spectrum was harder when the overall flux was higher, indicating that some of the fluctuations may take place in a hot (approximately 10 to the 7th K) emitting region at the bottom of the winds.
    Keywords: ASTRONOMY
    Type: Astrophysical Journal; vol. 244
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2019-06-28
    Description: The International ultraviolet Explorer high dispersion spectra of 59 Cyg obtained as part of the long term monitoring program have shown that noticeable variation can occur in C 5 and N 5 on timescales 3 hours t24 to 28 hours. In order to begin to resolve whether these changes occur continuously or sporadically, 48 hours were devoted to monitoring this star in January 1982. The January spectra show no short term variation, which may be consistent with sporadic rather than continuous variation.
    Keywords: ASTRONOMY
    Type: NASA. Goddard Space Flight Center Advan. in Ultraviolet Astron.; p 425-428
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Analysis of IUE high- and low-dispersion spectra of the young Herbig Ae star HR 5999 (HD 144668) covering 1978-1992 has revealed dramatic changes in the Mg II h and k (2795.5, 2802.7 A) emission profiles, changes in the column density and distribution in radial velocity of accreting gas, and flux in the Ly(alpha), O I and C IV emission lines, which are correlated with the UV excess luminosity. We also observe variability in the spectral type inferred from the UV spectral energy distribution, ranging from A5 IV-III in high state to A7 III in the low state. The trend of earlier inferred spectral type with decreasing wavelength and with increasing UV continuum flux has previously been noted as a signature of accretion disks in lower mass pre-main sequence stars (PMS) and in systems undergoing FU Orionis-type outbursts. Our data represent the first detection of similar phenomena in an intermediate mass (M equal to or greater than 2 solar mass) PMS star. Recent IUE spectra show gas accreting toward the star with velocities as high as +300 km/s, much as is seen toward beta Pic, and suggest that we also view this system through the debris disk. The absence of UV lines with the rotational broadening expected given the optical data (A7 IV, upsilon sin i = 180 plus or minus 20 km/s) for this system also suggests that most of the UV light originates in the disk, even in the low continuum state. The dramatic variability in the column density of accreting gas, consistent with clumpy accretion, such as has been observed toward beta Pic, is a hallmark of accretion onto young stars, and is not restricted to the clearing phase, since detectable amounts of accretion are present for stars, and is not restricted to the clearing phase, since detectable amounts of accretion are present for stars with 0.5 less than t(sub age) less than 2.8 Myr. The implications for models of beta Pic and similar systems are briefly discussed.
    Keywords: ASTRONOMY
    Type: Astrophysics and Space Science (ISSN 0004-640X); 212; p. 115-124
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