No Arabic abstract
We obtained near-infrared long-baseline interferometry of IRC+10420 with the AMBER instrument of ESOs Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI) in low and high spectral resolution (HR) mode to probe the photosphere and the innermost circumstellar environment of this rapidly evolving yellow hypergiant. In the HR observations, the visibilities show a noticeable drop across the Brackett gamma (BrG) line on all three baselines, and we found differential phases up to -25 degrees in the redshifted part of the BrG line and a non-zero closure phase close to the line center. The calibrated visibilities were corrected for AMBERs limited field-of-view to appropriately account for the flux contribution of IRC+10420s extended dust shell. We derived FWHM Gaussian sizes of 1.05 +/- 0.07 and 0.98 +/- 0.10 mas for IRC+10420s continuum-emitting region in the H and K bands, respectively, and the BrG-emitting region can be fitted with a geometric ring model with a diameter of 4.18 +0.19/-0.09 mas, which is approximately 4 times the stellar size. The geometric model also provides some evidence that the BrG line-emitting region is elongated towards a position angle of 36 degrees, well aligned with the symmetry axis of the outer reflection nebula. The HR observations were further analyzed by means of radiative transfer modeling using CMFGEN and the 2-D Busche & Hillier codes. Our spherical CMFGEN model poorly reproduces the observed line shape, blueshift, and extension, definitively showing that the IRC+10420 outflow is asymmetric. Our 2-D radiative transfer modeling shows that the blueshifted BrG emission and the shape of the visibility across the emission line can be explained with an asymmetric bipolar outflow with a high density contrast from pole to equator (8-16), where the redshifted light is substantially diminished.
The circumstellar envelope of the hypergiant star IRC+10420 has been traced as far out in SiO J=2-1 as in CO J = 1-0 and CO J = 2-1, in dramatic contrast with the centrally condensed (thermal) SiO- but extended CO-emitting envelopes of giant and supergiant stars. Here, we present an observation of the circumstellar envelope in SiO J=1-0 that, when combined with the previous observation in {sioii}, provide more stringent constraints on the density of the SiO-emitting gas than hitherto possible. The emission in SiO peaks at a radius of $sim$2arcsec whereas that in SiO J=2-1 emission peaks at a smaller radius of $sim$1arcsec, giving rise to their ring-like appearances. The ratio in brightness temperature between SiO J=1-0 and SiO J=2-1 decreases from a value well above unity at the innermost measurable radius to about unity at radius of $sim$2arcsec, beyond which this ratio remains approximately constant. Dividing the envelope into three zones as in models for the CO J = 1-0 and CO J = 2-1 emission, we show that the density of the SiO-emitting gas is comparable with that of the CO-emitting gas in the inner zone, but at least an order of magnitude higher by comparison in both the middle and outer zones. The SiO-emitting gas therefore originates from dense clumps, likely associated with the dust clumps seen in scattered optical light, surrounded by more diffuse CO-emitting interclump gas. We suggest that SiO molecules are released from dust grains due to shock interactions between the dense SiO-emitting clumps and the diffuse CO-emitting interclump gas.
Among evolved massive stars likely in transition to the Wolf-Rayet phase, IRC +10420 is probably one of the most enigmatic. It belongs to the category of yellow hypergiants and it is characterized by quite high mass loss episodes. Even though IRC +10420 benefited of many observations in several wavelength domains, it has never been a target for an X-ray observatory. We report here on the very first dedicated observation of IRC +10420 in X-rays, using the XMM-Newton satellite. Even though the target is not detected, we derive X-ray flux upper limits of the order of 1--3 10^-14 erg cm^-2 s^-1 (between 0.3 and 10.0 keV), and we discuss the case of IRC +10420 in the framework of emission models likely to be adequate for such an object. Using the Optical/UV Monitor on board XMM-Newton, we present the very first upper limits of the flux density of IRC +10420 in the UV domain (between 1800 and 2250 A, and between 2050 and 2450 A). Finally, we also report on the detection in this field of 10 X-ray and 7 UV point sources, and we briefly discuss their properties and potential counterparts at longer wavelengths.
We analyse the main physical parameters and the circumstellar environment of the young Herbig Be star HD 98922. We present AMBER/VLTI high spectral resolution (R =12000) interferometric observations across the Br$gamma$ line, accompanied by UVES high-resolution spectroscopy and SINFONI-AO assisted near-infrared integral field spectroscopic data. To interpret our observations, we develop a magneto-centrifugally driven disc-wind model. Our analysis of the UVES spectrum shows that HD 98922 is a young (~5x10^5 yr) Herbig Be star (SpT=B9V), located at a distance of 440(+60-50) pc, with a mass accretion rate of ~9+/-3x10^(-7) M_sun yr^(-1). SINFONI K-band AO-assisted imaging shows a spatially resolved circumstellar disc-like region (~140 AU in diameter) with asymmetric brightness distribution. Our AMBER/VLTI UT observations indicate that the Br$gamma$ emitting region (radius ~0.31+/-0.04 AU) is smaller than the continuum emitting region (inner dust radius ~0.7+/-0.2 AU), showing significant non-zero V-shaped differential phases (i.e. non S-shaped, as expected for a rotating disc). The value of the continuum-corrected pure Br$gamma$ line visibility at the longest baseline (89 m) is ~0.8+/-0.1, i.e. the Br$gamma$ emitting region is partially resolved. Our modelling suggests that the observed Br$gamma$ line-emitting region mainly originates from a disc wind with a half opening angle of 30deg, and with a mass-loss rate of ~2x10(-7) M_sun yr^(-1). The observed V-shaped differential phases are reliably reproduced by combining a simple asymmetric continuum disc model with our Br$gamma$ disc-wind model. The Br$gamma$ emission of HD 98922 can be modelled with a disc wind that is able to approximately reproduce all interferometric observations if we assume that the intensity distribution of the dust continuum disc is asymmetric.
The paper investigates the milli-arcsecond scale structure of the present-day mass-loss of the post-Red Supergiant IRC+10420. We use three telescopes of the VLT Interferometer in combination with the AMBER near-infrared beam combiner to measure spectrally dispersed correlated fluxes in the K-band around the Br gamma transition. The resulting visibilities are compared to the predicted visibilities of emission structures with various simple models in order to infer the size of the observed emission region. The Br gamma line is resolved by VLTI+AMBER on all three baselines, with the maximum projected baseline extending 69 meter and a P.A. ranging between 10 and 30 degrees. A differential phase between line and continuum is detected on the longest baseline. The Br gamma emission region is found to have a diameter of 3.3 milli-arcseconds (FWHM), when compared to a Gaussian intensity distribution. A uniform disk and a ring-like intensity distribution do not fit the line visibilities. Comparing the AMBER equivalent width of Br gamma with measurements from various epochs, we find that the stellar photosphere contributes about 60% of the total continuum light at 2.2 micron. The remaining 40% continuum emission is found on scales larger than the 66mas AMBER field of view. Using simple arguments, and assuming optically thick line emission, we find that the line emitting region is elongated. We briefly discuss the possibilities whether such a structure is due to a bi-polar flow or a circumstellar disk. (Abridged).
The hypergiant IRC+10420 is a unique object for the study of stellar evolution since it is the only object that is believed to be witnessed in its rapid transition from the red supergiant stage to the Wolf-Rayet phase. Its effective temperature has increased by 1000-2000K within only 20yr. We present the first speckle observations of IRC+10420 with 73mas resolution. A diffraction-limited 2.11 micron image was reconstructed from 6m telescope speckle data using the bispectrum speckle-interferometry method. The visibility function shows that the dust shell contributes 40% to the total flux and the unresolved central object 60%. Radiative transfer calculations have been performed to model both the spectral energy distribution and visibility function. The grain sizes, a, were found to be in accordance with a standard distribution function, n(a)~a^(-3.5), with 0.005 micron < a < 0.45 micron. The observed dust shell properties cannot be fitted by single-shell models but seem to require multiple components. At a certain distance we considered an enhancement over the assumed 1/r^x density distribution. The best model for both SED and visibility was found for a dust shell with a dust temperature of 1000K at its inner radius of 69Rstar. At a distance of 308Rstar the density was enhanced by a factor of 40 and and its density exponent was changed from x=2 to x=1.7. The shells intensity distribution was found to be ring-like.The ring diameter is equal to the inner diameter of the hot shell (69mas). The diameter of the central star is 1mas. The two-component model can be interpreted in terms of a termination of an enhanced mass-loss phase roughly 60 to 90 yr (for d=5kpc) ago.