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Published byJoshua Compton Modified over 11 years ago
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Steve B. Howell (NOAO) Don Hoard (Spitzer Science Center Bob Stencel (U. of Denver)
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Image credit: Babak Tafreshi (TWAN) [Astronomy Picture of the Day, 5 Dec 2009] What is Epsilon Aurigae? -Bright naked eye object. Presence of eclipses first reported in 1821. -Eclipses last almost 2 years, and happen every 27.1 years (mid-eclipse ~5 Aug 2010) -What is the invisible object that causes the eclipses? -Why do the eclipses last so long and change over time? -What is the nature of the primary (i.e., eclipsed) star, the secondary star, and the disk? Capella Eta (η) Zeta (ζ) Epsilon (ε) Beta (β) Theta (θ)
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What we knew at the start of the current eclipse The Eclipsed Star: F spectral type, temperature 7800 K Very large (radius ~150 Rsun) Is it a massive supergiant (20 Msun)? Supernova in the future? Or a low mass star (up to a few Msun)? post-Asymptotic Giant Branch object? = Dying star, planetary nebula in the next few thousand years
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The Eclipsing Disk: Very large, but how large? Radius of ~20 AU if the F star is massive Radius of ~5 AU if the F star is low mass Very massive?, could it form planets? Low mass?, could it form planets? Is there a central object(s)? Disk Morphology? Disk, donut, ring, gaps? Thick, thin? etc.. What we knew at the start of the current eclipse
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The Object at the Center of the Disk: Maybe it is Nothing? Only if the disk is very massive (but then the disk would be too hot) Maybe a Black hole? Nope (no X-ray emission) A massive star? Two somewhat less massive stars? Only required if the F star is massive Too bright (in the UV)? A single, normal, B-type star? Only if the disk and F star are not massive What we knew at the start of the current eclipse
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+ + Things are not always as they appear…
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SED to the Rescue
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IUE-SWP (1985) FUSE (2001) UBVRI (2008) JHK (1997-2000) Spitzer IRS (2005) Spitzer MIPS-24, -70 and MIPS-SED (2005) HST-GHRS (1996) Spitzer IRAC (2009) IUE-LWP (1986) Optical spectra (1982; 1990-92)
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Investigate the Dust Disk
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Epsilon Aurigae was estimated to… …exceed IRAC saturation limit for shortest full array exposure (2-sec) by factor of ~50 …exceed IRAC saturation limit for shortest sub-array exposure (0.02-sec) by factor of ~3 IMPOSSIBLE to observe with IRAC!!! Well, so they thought!! IRAC MIPS IRS
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What an image of a star REALLY looks like…
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Take advantage of reduced sensitivity at pixel corners. Spread brightest part of remaining stellar image over four pixels. IRAC Observing Strategy
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First Spitzer IRAC Observation of Epsilon Aurigae 26 April 2009 used Channel 1 (3.6 microns) and Channel 2 (4.5 microns) 256 x 64 exposures, each 0.02 seconds long = 5.1 seconds total per channel
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Spectral Energy Distribution of Epsilon Aurigae Ultraviolet Infrared F0 type post-AGB star normal B5 type star Cool dust disk B Star - Hubble Space Telescope 1 Sept, Dec, & Mar 2011
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Spectral Energy Distribution of Epsilon Aurigae
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B Kloppenborg et al. Nature 464, 870-872 (2010) doi:10.1038/nature08968 Synthesized images from the 2009 observations.
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R = 135 Rsun = 0.63 AU R = 3.8 AU h = 0.95 AU R = 3.9 Rsun B5 star T = 15,000 K M = 5.9 Msun F0 post-AGB T = 7750 K M = 1-3 Msun Dust Disk T = 550 K M ~ Mearth? 1 Astronomical Unit (AU) = Sun-Earth separation Stellar Separation = 18 AU (~ Sun-Uranus distance)
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Lissauer et al. 1996, ApJ, 465, 371 The changing view of the disk pre-eclipse view
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JHKs (2MASS; 1999) MSX (unfilled diamonds; 1996-97) ground LM (white squares; 1997-2000) The changing view of the disk - Eclipse T = 550 K disk
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Lissauer et al. 1996, ApJ, 465, 371 The changing view of the disk mid-cycle view pre-eclipse view
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T = 1100 K disk The changing view of the disk – Anti-Eclipse Front Side
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