Hubble Space Telescope Spectroscopy of the Carbon Star TX PISCIUM

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astronomy

Scientific paper

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Stars: Circumstellar Matter, Stars: Carbon, Stars: Chromospheres, Stars: Individual Constellation Name: Tx Piscium, Stars: Mass Loss, Ultraviolet: Stars

Scientific paper

Ultraviolet spectra obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope of the carbon star TX Piscium (HR 9004) are presented, along with analysis providing information on its outer atmosphere, including flow and turbulent velocities, line formation mechanisms, and variations with time. Both thermal (collisionally excited) and fluorescent emission from the chromosphere of the star appear to be formed near the stellar rest velocity, i.e., in a region below that in which the stellar wind is accelerated. Absorption self-reversals in the Mg II emission confirm the presence of an outflowing stellar wind at a mean velocity of about 9--10 km s-1. Circumstellar absorption features (Mn I and Fe I) overlying the Mg II emission indicate a cool shell expanding at about 5--6 km s-1 relative to the photosphere. The widths (FWHM) of various emission lines indicate that the chromospheric turbulence is at least 16 km s-1, but that it may increase with altitude to as much as 34 km s-1. Three hours of integration on the C II] lines are examined for any signs of variability that might indicate the presence of shocks, but no statistically significant variations are seen. A previous identification (in spectra of UU Aur) of an emission line at 2807 Angstroms, seen only in spectra of carbon stars, as belonging to Fe I multiplet UV45 pumped by the C II] line at 2325 Angstroms is confirmed by the discovery of an absorption feature corresponding exactly to the wavelength of the pumped transition (Fe I UV13) near 2325 Angstroms. Lines from Fe II UV165, previously seen in solar off-limb spectra and in Goddard High-Resolution Spectrograph spectra of alpha Tau, are clearly present. The normally much stronger Fe II UV32, 62, and 63 multiplets are seen but are weaker relative to both the UV165 lines and the intercombination lines of C II] and Si II] than in alpha Tau. The weakness of these Fe II lines is indicated both by their absolute flux levels and by their narrow, single-peaked profiles, which are in sharp contrast to the broad, double-peaked profiles seen in oxygen-rich cool giant and supergiant stars. The weakness of the Fe II lines and the presence of the Fe I 2807 Angstroms line suggest that the ionization fraction of iron (Fe II/Fe I) is significantly lower in the outer atmospheres of carbon stars. Fluxes in emission lines of Fe II and Mg II are >=2--3 times lower than in a 1984 IUE spectrum of TX Psc, confirming that the latter was obtained at an epoch of unusual UV brightness for the star. The Mg II profiles are heavily mutilated by overlying absorption, even more so than in 1984. The TX Psc profiles are very similar to those seen in the carbon star TW Hor but are dramatically different than those in another carbon star, UU Aur, whose lines show violet wing emission out to much shorter wavelengths than in the other two stars.

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