Redshifts of high-temperature emission lines in the far-ultraviolet spectra of late-type stars.
Abstract
High-dispersion IUE spectra of six late-type stars exhibit small but statistically significant differential redshifts of high-temperature emission lines, like Si IV and C IV, with respect to low-temperature lines like S I and O I. A well-exposed, small-aperture spectrum of the active chromosphere binary Capella (Alpha Aurigae A: G6 II+F9 III) establishes that the high-temperature lines are redshifted in an absolute sense with respect to the accurately determined photospheric velocity of the system at single-line phase 0.50. Several possible explanations for the stellar redshifts are discused, including a warm wind (100,000 K) in which aparent redshifts are produced in optically thick lines by an accelerating outfow, and the downflowing component of a vertical circulation system for which the up-leg portion of the flow is too cool, too hot, or too tenuous to be visible in Si IV and C IV. If the second scenario is true, the stellar redshifts may provide an important phenomenological link to the downflows observed in 100,000 K species over magnetic active regions in the sun.
- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal
- Pub Date:
- November 1983
- DOI:
- 10.1086/161493
- Bibcode:
- 1983ApJ...274..801A
- Keywords:
-
- Emission Spectra;
- Far Ultraviolet Radiation;
- High Temperature;
- Late Stars;
- Line Spectra;
- Red Shift;
- Iue;
- Optical Thickness;
- Solar Activity;
- Solar Magnetic Field;
- Spaceborne Astronomy;
- Stellar Winds;
- Ultraviolet Spectra;
- Astrophysics