The detached dust and gas shells around the carbon star U Antliae
Journal article, 2010

Context. Geometrically thin, detached shells of gas have been found around a handful of carbon stars. The current knowledge on these shells is mostly based on CO radio line data. However, imaging in scattered stellar light adds important new information as well as allows studies of the dust shells. Aims. Previous observations of scattered stellar light in the circumstellar medium around the carbon star U Ant were taken through filters centred on the resonance lines of K and Na. These observations could not separate the scattering by dust and atoms. The aim of this paper is to remedy this situation. Methods. We have obtained polarization data on stellar light scattered in the circumstellar medium around U Ant through filters which contain no strong lines, making it possible to differentiate between the two scattering agents. Kinematic, as well as spatial, information on the gas shells were obtained through high-resolution echelle spectrograph observations of the KI and NaD lines. Results. We confirm the existence of two detached shells around U Ant. The inner shell (at a radius of approximate to 43 '' and a width of approximate to 2 '') consists mainly of gas, while the outer shell (at a radius of approximate to 50 '' and a width of approximate to 7 '') appears to consist exclusively of dust. Both shells appear to have an over-all spherical geometry. The gas shell mass is estimated to be 2 x 10(-3) M-circle dot, while the mass of the dust shell is estimated to be 5 x 10(-5) M-circle dot. The derived expansion velocity, from the KI and NaD lines, of the gas shell, 19.5 km s(-1), agrees with that obtained from CO radio line data. The inferred shell age is 2700 years. There is structure, e.g. in the form of arcs, inside the gas shell, but it is not clear whether these are due to additional shells. Conclusions. Our results support the hypothesis that the observed geometrically thin, detached shells around carbon stars are the results of brief periods of intense mass loss, probably associated with thermal pulses, and subsequent wind-wind interactions. The separation into a gas and a dust shell, with different widths, is most likely the effect of different dynamical evolutions of the two media after their ejection.

stars:

multiple shells

agb stars

intermediate-mass stars

models

stellar evolution

asymptotic giant branch

envelopes

light

stars: AGB and post-AGB

r-scl

circumstellar

stars: evolution

mass-loss

emission

stars: abundances

Author

Matthias Maercker

Stockholm University

Hans Olofsson

Chalmers, Department of Radio and Space Science, National Facility for Radio Astronomy

K. Eriksson

Uppsala University

B. Gustafsson

Uppsala University

Fredrik Schöier

Chalmers, Department of Radio and Space Science, National Facility for Radio Astronomy

Astronomy and Astrophysics

0004-6361 (ISSN) 1432-0746 (eISSN)

Vol. 511 1 A37- A37

Subject Categories

Aerospace Engineering

DOI

10.1051/0004-6361/200913376

More information

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3/1/2018 7