A&A 470, L21-L24 (2007)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20077840
Letter
Direct diameter measurement of a star filling its Roche lobe
The semi-detached binary SS Leporis spatially resolved with VINCI/VLTI
T. Verhoelst, E. van Aarle, and B. AckeInstituut voor Sterrenkunde, KU Leuven, Belgium
e-mail: tijl.verhoelst@ster.kuleuven.be
(Received 10 May 2007 / Accepted 26 May 2007)
Abstract
Context.Stellar evolution in close binary systems is strongly
influenced by mass transfer from one star to the other when one component fills its zero-velocity surface or Roche Lobe.
SS Lep
is a fairly nearby close binary showing the
Algol
paradox and a shell spectrum, both indicative of (past) mass transfer.
Aims.To study the process of mass transfer and its
evolutionary consequences, we aim at a direct characterisation of the
spatial dimensions of the different components of SS Lep with IR interferometry.
Methods.We use VINCI/VLTI interferometric observations in the K band and
photometric observations from the UV to the far-IR. The visibilities
are interpreted with simple geometrical models and the Spectral
Energy Distribution (SED) is
decomposed into the three main components: A star, M star and dust shell/disk.
Results.From the SED, we find that the main emitters in the K band are the M star and the circumstellar environment. Both are spatially resolved with the VINCI observations, showing the excess
to be circumbinary and showing the M star to have a size equal to its Roche Lobe.
Conclusions.We conclude that, for the first time, we have
directly resolved a star filling its Roche Lobe. The resulting mass
transfer is probably the cause of (1) the circumbinary dust disk of
which we see the hot inner region spatially resolved in our
observations, (2) the unusually high luminosity of the A star and
(3) the shell spectrum seen in the UV and optical spectra.
Key words: techniques: interferometric -- stars: binaries: close -- stars: circumstellar matter -- stars: fundamental parameters
© ESO 2007
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