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We present multi-epoch photometry and spectroscopy of a light echo from eta Carinaes 19th century Great Eruption. This echo shows a steady decline over a decade, sampling the 1850s plateau of the eruption. Spectra show the bulk outflow speed increasing from 150 km/s at early times, up to 600 km/s in the plateau. Later phases also develop remarkably broad emission wings indicating mass accelerated to more than 10,000 km/s. Together with other clues, this provides direct evidence for an explosive ejection. This is accompanied by a transition from narrow absorption lines to emission lines, often with broad P Cygni profiles. These changes imply that the pre-1845 luminosity spikes are distinct from the 1850s plateau. The key reason for this change may be that shock interaction dominates the plateau. The spectral evolution of eta Car closely resembles that of UGC2773-OT, which had clear signatures of shock interaction. We propose a 2-stage scenario for eta Cars eruption: (1) a slow outflow in the decades before the eruption, driven by binary interaction that produced a dense equatorial outflow, followed by (2) explosive energy injection that drove CSM interaction, powering the plateau and sweeping slower CSM into a fast shell that became the Homunculus. We discuss how this sequence could arise from a stellar merger in a triple system, leaving the eccentric binary seen today. This gives a self-consistent scenario that may explain interacting transients across a wide range of initial mass.
In our ongoing study of eta Carinaes light echoes, there is a relatively bright echo that has been fading slowly, reflecting the 1845-1858 plateau of the eruption. A separate paper discusses its detailed evolution, but here we highlight one important
We present follow-up optical imaging and spectroscopy of one of the light echoes of $eta$ Carinaes 19th-century Great Eruption discovered by Rest et al. (2012). By obtaining images and spectra at the same light echo position between 2011 and 2014, we
Aims. Every 5.5 years eta Cars light curve and spectrum change remarkably across all observed wavelength bands. We compare the recent spectroscopic event in mid-2014 to the events in 2003 and 2009 and investigate long-term trends. Methods. Eta Car wa
Eta Carinae (Eta Car) is one of the most massive binary stars in the Milky Way. It became the second-brightest star in the sky during its mid-19th century Great Eruption, but then faded from view (with only naked-eye estimates of brightness). Its eru
During the years 1838-1858, the very massive star {eta} Carinae became the prototype supernova impostor: it released nearly as much light as a supernova explosion and shed an impressive amount of mass, but survived as a star.1 Based on a light-echo s