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A&A 436, 1009-1020 (2005)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20052800
Evolution of V838 Monocerotis during and after the 2002 eruption
R. TylendaDepartment for Astrophysics, N. Copernicus Astronomical Centre, Rabianska 8, 87-100 Torun, Poland
e-mail: tylenda@ncac.torun.pl
(Received 1 February 2005 / Accepted 20 February 2005)
Abstract
By fitting the available photometric data on V838 Mon
with standard supergiant spectra we have derived principal stellar parameters,
i.e. effective temperature,
radius and luminosity, and followed the evolution of the object
since its discovery in early January 2002. Our analysis
shows that the 2002 outburst of V838 Mon consisted of two major phases:
pre-eruption, which was
observed in January 2002 and a major outburst, the eruption, which started
in the beginning of February 2002. During pre-eruption the object seemed to be
relaxing after an initial event which had presumably taken place in last days of
December 2001. The eruption phase, which lasted until mid-April 2002, resulted
from a very strong energy burst, which presumably took place in last days of January
at the base of the stellar envelope inflated in pre-eruption. The burst produced
an energy wave, which was observed as a strong luminosity flash in the beginning of
February, followed by a strong mass outflow in the form of two shells, which was observed
as an expanding photosphere in later epochs. In mid-April, when the outflow became
optically transparent and most of its energy radiated away, the object entered the
decline phase during which V838 Mon was evolving along the Hayashi track. This
we interpret as evidence that the main energy source during
decline was gravitational contraction of the object envelope inflated
in eruption. Late in 2002, dust formation started in the expanding shells which
gave rise to a strong infrared excess observed in 2003.
Key words: stars: variables: general -- stars: fundamental parameters -- stars: winds, outflows -- stars: individual: V838 Mon
SIMBAD Objects
© ESO 2005
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