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A&A 367, 891-909 (2001)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20000532
Extended optical spectroscopic monitoring of wind structure in HD 152408
R. K. Prinja1, O. Stahl2, A. Kaufer3, S. R. Colley1, P. A. Crowther1 and B. Wolf21 Department of Physics & Astronomy, University College London, Gower Street, London WC1E 6BT, UK
2 Landessternwarte Heidelberg, Königstuhl 12, 69117 Heidelberg, Germany
3 European Southern Observatory, Alonso de Cordova 3107, Santiago 19, Chile
(Received 25 August 2000 / Accepted 14 December 2000)
Abstract
New perspectives are provided on significant spatial structure and
temporal variability in the near-star wind regions (i.e.
)
of the massive luminous star HD 152408 (classified as O8:Iafpe or WN9ha).
This study is primarily based on the analysis of
high-quality échelle spectra secured during 21 nights
between 1999 July to August, using the Landessternwarte-developed
(fibre-fed) FEROS instrument on the ESO 1.52-m telescope.
These extended time-series data,
with a total simultaneous wavelength coverage of
Å,
were exploited to monitor
absorption and emission fluctuations (of
5-
of the line
flux) in several He I and Balmer lines,
together with more deep-seated (near-photosphere) disturbances in weaker
metallic emission and absorption lines.
Organised large-scale wind structure in HD 152408 is principally
betrayed by sequential episodes of discrete absorption and emission
features, which migrate from near zero velocity to almost the wind
terminal velocity. This evolution is extremely slow, however, typically
spanning
4 days for an individual episode.
We demonstrate that the blue-shifted
absorption episodes in He I are very closely mirrored (in velocity and
time) by absorption features (i.e. reduced not enhanced flux) in the
blue wings of the mainly recombination formed broad H
emission line.
The implication is that there is detailed balancing between ground state
photoionization and recombination in the substantially optically thick
Balmer lines.
Surprisingly, the velocity behaviour of the red-ward and blue-ward migrating
features is highly asymmetric, such that the mean acceleration of the former
is less than 50% of the latter.
Fourier analysis reveals a modulation time-scale for the wind activity
of
7.7 days, plus its harmonic at 3.9 days. The longer period
is
28 times greater than the characteristic radial
wind flow time of HD 152408. We also detect a
1.5 day periodic
variation in the radial velocity of the weak C IV
5801, 5812 absorption lines, which are the closest
approximation to "pure"photospheric lines in the optical spectrum
of HD 152408.
The wind-formed optical lines of HD 152408 are also affected by
fluctuations in the central peak emission, particularly evident in H
where the equivalent width may vary by up to 20% . Data secured
between 1995 and 1999 reveal, however, that the epoch-to-epoch mean profiles
are remarkably similar.
Non-LTE steady-state stellar atmosphere models are used to synthesis
profiles to match representative
H
and He I
5876 line profiles.
Only a slow (tailored) velocity law (compared to
) provides a good
match to the H
emission peak and wings, but
the models predict excess He I absorption. The observed extreme
H
emission variations can be reproduced by the synthetic profiles
with an implied
10% variation in mass-loss rate.
The results on optical line profile variability in HD 152408 are
discussed in the context of models for co-rotating interaction regions
(CIRs) in the wind. Several constraints are provided that argue against
simple velocity fields in such streams, including (i) the slow
acceleration of features to high velocities, within
,
(ii) the strong asymmetry in projected acceleration of the approaching
and receding stream material, (iii) Balmer line absorption effects
in the approaching material,
(iv) the rise of localised features from very low velocities, and
(v) the stability of the large-scale CIRs
against turbulent small-scale wind structure.
We suggest that it may be worth exploring hydrodynamic simulations of CIRs
that incorporate different velocity fields on the leading (faster
accelerating; blue-ward absorption) and trailing (slower accelerating;
red-ward emission) edges of the spiral structures.
Key words: line: profiles -- stars: early-type -- stars: individual (HD 152408) -- stars: mass loss
Offprint request: R. K. Prinja, rkp@star.ucl.ac.uk
SIMBAD Objects in preparation
© ESO 2001
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