Near-IR and visible interferometry of Be stars:
constraints from wind models
Ph. Stee1
and
J. Bittar2
1
Observatoire de la Côte d'Azur,
Département Fresnel UMR 6528, Caussols,
F-06460 St. Vallier de Thiey, France
2
Observatoire Midi-Pyrénées,
CNRS UMR 5572, 14 Av. Edouard Belin, F-31400 Toulouse, France
We report theoretical HI visible and near-IR line profiles,
i.e.
H 6562,
H 4861,
and
Br 21656,
and intensity maps for a large set of parameters (density, temperature,
envelope geometry, inclination angle) representative of early to late
Be spectral types. We have computed the size of the emitting
region in the
Br
line and its
nearby continuum which both originate from a very extended region,
i.e. at least 40 stellar radii, which is twice the size of the
H
emitting region. We predict the relative fluxes
from the central star, and the envelope contribution in the given lines and
in the continuum for a wide range of parameters characterizing the disk
models. For a density
= 5x10-13 g cm-3 at the base of the
stellar photosphere, we obtain the largest probability of
HI IR lines in emission, which is a factor of 100 lower
than typical values found for Be stars. We have also studied the effect
of changing the spectral type on our results, and we obtain a clear
correlation between the luminosity in
H
and in the infrared. We found that for a density
= 5x10-12 g cm-3,
the probability of detecting HI IR lines in
emission must be stronger for late-B spectral type stars. If no IR lines
are detected for late types, it may indicate that the density in the
disc is very
high
( 10-11
g cm-3). On the other hand, we found that around
= 5x10-13 g cm-3,
it is possible to have a large envelope contribution in the
Br
line and a similar or even smaller emission in the Balmer lines. Even if
Br
is formed in an extended region, it is possible to obtain a FWHM and a
V/R that agree well with observed profiles. Finally, it seems
that the contribution in the
Br
line increases when the envelope becomes more and more "disk-like",
contrary to the
H
and
H
lines.
Accepted by A&A
Preprints from
Philippe.Stee@obs-azur.fr
or on the web at
http://www.obs-nice.fr/stee/publicationgb.html
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