Dissecting the Homunculus nebula around Eta Carinae with spatially resolved near-infrared spectroscopy

Nov, 2002
18 pages
Published in:
  • Mon.Not.Roy.Astron.Soc. 337 (2002) 1252
e-Print:

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Abstract: (arXiv)
Near-infrared emission lines provide unique diagnostics of the geometry, structure, kinematics, and excitation of eta Carinae's circumstellar ejecta, and give clues to the nature of its wind. The infrared spectrum is a strong function of position in eta Car's nebula, with a mix of intrinsic and reflected emission. Molecular hydrogen traces cool gas and dust in the polar lobes, while [Fe II] blankets their inner surfaces. These lines reveal the back wall of the SE polar lobe for the first time, and give the clearest picture yet of the 3-D geometry. Additionally, collisionally-excited [Fe II] reveals the kinematic structure of a recently discovered `Little Homunculus' expanding inside the larger one. Equatorial gas in the `Fan', on the other hand, shows a spectrum indicating recombination and fluorescent pumping. Some equatorial ejecta glow in the He I 10830 line, showing evidence for material ejected in the 1890 outburst of eta Car. Closer to the star, the compact `Weigelt blobs' are marginally resolved, allowing their infrared spectrum to be separated from the star for the first time. In general, infrared spectra reveal a coherent, directional dependence of excitation in the Homunculus: polar ejecta are collisionally excited, whereas equatorial ejecta are dominated by fluorescence and normal photoexcitation. These are important clues to the geometry of the central star's UV radiation field. Reflected near-infrared emission lines also reveal interesting latitudinal dependence in the stellar wind.
Note:
  • To appear in Monthly Notices, December 21 2002 (MNRAS, 337, 1252). 18 pages, 20 figures
  • CIRCUMSTELLAR MATTER
  • REFLECTION NEBULAE
  • STARS MASS-LOSS
  • STARS WINDS
  • STARS OUTFLOWS
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