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We present the first observations of the circumstellar (CS) disk system 51 Ophiuchi with the Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer. We detect several absorption lines arising from the unusual metastable atomic species NI (2D), NI (2P), and SII (2D). These levels lie 1.8 - 3.6 eV above the ground level and have radiative decay lifetimes of 2 days or less, indicating that the lines arise from warm CS gas. The high S/N FUSE spectra, obtained six days apart, also show time-variable absorption features arising from NI, NII, OI (1D), and FeIII, which are redshifted with respect to the stellar velocity. The resolved redshifted absorption extends over many tens of km/s (40 for NI, 100 for NII, 65 for OI, and 84 for FeIII). We calculate column densities for all the variable infalling CS gasses, using the apparent optical depth method. The FeIII and NII infalling gasses must be produced through collisional ionization, and the ionization fraction of nitrogen suggests a gas temperature between 20000 and 34000 K. The infalling gas shows a peculiar, non-solar composition, with nitrogen and iron more abundant than carbon. We also set upper limits on the line-of-sight column densities of molecular hydrogen and carbon monoxide. These observations strengthen the connection between 51 Oph and the older debris-disk system Beta Pictoris, and indicate that there may be infalling planetesimals in the 51 Oph system.
We present a numerical model describing a circularly symmetric gaseous disk around the Be star chi Ophiuchi. The model is constrained by long-baseline interferometric observations that are sensitive to the H-alpha Balmer line emission from the disk.
51 Oph is one of the few young Be stars displaying a strong CO overtone emission at 2.3 microns in addition to the near infrared excess commonly observed in this type of stars. In this paper we first aim to locate the CO bandheads emitting region. Th
We outline the results from a FUSE Team program designed to characterize OVI absorption in the disk of the Milky Way. We find that OVI absorption occurs throughout most of the Galactic plane, at least out to several kpc from the Sun, and that it is d
Very few molecular species have been detected in circumstellar disks surrounding young stellar objects. We are carrying out an observational study of the chemistry of circumstellar disks surrounding T Tauri and Herbig Ae stars. First results of this
Eta Carinae was observed by FUSE through the LWRS (30 arcsec x30 arcsec) and HIRS (1.25 arcsec x 20 arcsec) apertures in March and April 2004. There are significant differences between the two spectra. About half of the LWRS flux appears to be due to