Evidence for a warm wind from the red star in symbiotic binaries.
Abstract
A systematic redshift of the high ionization resonance emission lines with respect to the intercombination lines is found from an examination of the ultraviolet spectra of symbiotic stars obtained with IUE. After consideration of other possibilities, this is most probably explained by photon scattering in an expanding envelope optically thick to the resonance lines. Line formation in a wind, or at the base of a wind is therefore suggested. Reasons are also given indicating line formation of the most ionized species in a region with an electron temperature of the order of 100,000 K, probably around the cool star. The behavior of the emission line width with ionization energy seems to support this model. The cool components of symbiotic stars appear to differ from normal red giants, which do not have winds of this temperature. An explanation in terms of a higher rotation velocity due to the binary nature of these stars is suggested.
- Publication:
-
Astronomy and Astrophysics
- Pub Date:
- October 1983
- Bibcode:
- 1983A&A...126..407F
- Keywords:
-
- Binary Stars;
- Red Giant Stars;
- Stellar Winds;
- Ultraviolet Spectra;
- Iue;
- Line Spectra;
- M Stars;
- Radial Velocity;
- Spectrum Analysis;
- Stellar Spectra;
- Astrophysics