Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2brh9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T22:50:07.576Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Zooming into Eta Carinae with interferometry

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 January 2015

Jose H. Groh*
Affiliation:
Geneva Observatory, Geneva University, Chemin des Maillettes 51, CH-1290 Sauverny, Switzerland email: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

Shaped by strong mass loss, rapid rotation, and/or the presence of a close companion, the circumstellar environment around the most massive stars is complex and anything but spherical. Here we provide a brief overview of the high spatial resolution observations of Eta Carinae performed with the Very Large Telescope Interferometer (VLTI). Special emphasis is given to discuss VLTI/AMBER and VLTI/VINCI observations, which directly resolve spatial scales comparable to those where mass loss originates. Studying scales as small as a few milli-arcseconds allows us to investigate kinematical effects of rotation and binarity in more detail than ever before.

Type
Contributed Papers
Copyright
Copyright © International Astronomical Union 2015 

References

Bjorkman, J. E. & Cassinelli, J. P. 1993, ApJ 409, 429CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Busche, J. R. & Hillier, D. J. 2005, AJ 129, 454Google Scholar
Corcoran, M. F. 2005, AJ 129, 2018Google Scholar
Damineli, A., Conti, P. S., & Lopes, D. F. 1997, New. Astron. 2, 107Google Scholar
Damineli, A., Hillier, D. J., Corcoran, M. F., et al. 2008a, MNRAS 386, 2330Google Scholar
Damineli, A., Hillier, D. J., Corcoran, M. F., et al. 2008b, MNRAS 384, 1649Google Scholar
Davidson, K. & Humphreys, R. M. 1997, ARA&A 35, 1Google Scholar
Groh, J. H. & Damineli, A. 2004, Information Bulletin on Variable Stars 5492, 1Google Scholar
Groh, J. H., Hillier, D. J., Madura, T. I., & Weigelt, G. 2012, MNRAS 423, 1623CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Groh, J. H., Madura, T. I., Owocki, S. P., Hillier, D. J., & Weigelt, G. 2010, ApJ (Letters) 716, L223Google Scholar
Hillier, D. J., Davidson, K., Ishibashi, K., & Gull, T. 2001, ApJ 553, 837Google Scholar
Hillier, D. J., Gull, T., Nielsen, K., et al. 2006, ApJ 642, 1098CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kervella, P. 2007, A&A 464, 1045Google Scholar
Madura, T. I., Gull, T. R., Owocki, S. P., et al. 2012, MNRAS 420, 2064Google Scholar
Mehner, A., Davidson, K., Ferland, G. J., & Humphreys, R. M. 2010, ApJ 710, 729Google Scholar
Okazaki, A. T., Owocki, S. P., Russell, C. M. P., & Corcoran, M. F. 2008, MNRAS 388, L39Google Scholar
Owocki, S. P., Cranmer, S. R., & Blondin, J. M. 1994, ApJ 424, 887Google Scholar
Owocki, S. P., Cranmer, S. R., & Gayley, K. G. 1996, ApJ (Letters) 472, L115Google Scholar
Owocki, S. P., Cranmer, S. R., & Gayley, K. G. 1998, Ap&SS 260, 149Google Scholar
Parkin, E. R., Pittard, J. M., Corcoran, M. F., & Hamaguchi, K. 2011, ApJ 726, 105Google Scholar
Parkin, E. R., Pittard, J. M., Corcoran, M. F., Hamaguchi, K., & Stevens, I. R. 2009, MNRAS 394, 1758Google Scholar
Pittard, J. M. & Corcoran, M. F. 2002, A&A 383, 636Google Scholar
Stevens, I. R., Blondin, J. M., & Pollock, A. M. T. 1992, ApJ 386, 265Google Scholar
Teodoro, M., Damineli, A., Sharp, R. G., Groh, J. H., & Barbosa, C. L. 2008, MNRAS 387, 564Google Scholar
van Boekel, R., Kervella, P., Schöller, M., et al. 2003, A&A 410, L37Google Scholar
Verner, E., Bruhweiler, F., & Gull, T. 2005, ApJ 624, 973Google Scholar
Weigelt, G., Kraus, S., Driebe, T., et al. 2007, A&A 464, 87Google Scholar