The Be Star Newsletter, Volume 37 - February 2004

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Long-term variations and physical properties of  Dra

S.M. Saad1,2, J. Kubat1, P. Koubsky1, P. Harmanec3,1, P. Skoda1, D. Korcakova1, J. Krticka4,1, M. Slechta1, H. Bozic5, H. Ak6, P. Hadrava1, V. Votruba4,1

1Astronomicky ustav, Akademie ved Ceske republiky, CZ-251 65 Ondrejov, Czech Republic
2National Research Institute of Astronomy and Geophysics, 11421 Helwan, Cairo, Egypt
3Astronomicky ustav UK, V Holesovickach 2, CZ-180 00 Praha 8, Czech Republic
4Ustav teoreticke fyziky a astrofyziky PrF MU, Kotlarska 2, CZ-611 37 Brno, Czech Republic
5Opservatorij Hvar, Geodetski fakultet, Sveuciliste Zagreb, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia
5Ankara University, Science Faculty, Astronomy and Space Science Dept., Tandogan, Ankara, 06100 Turkey

We present an analysis of new spectroscopic observations of the bright Be star  Dra obtained at the Ondrejov observatory during 1992 - 2003 and UBV photometric observations secured at several observatories. General characteristics and a line identification of the spectrum of  Dra are obtained in the regions 3730 - 5650 Å and 5850 - 7800 Å by a comparison with the theoretical spectrum. The fundamental stellar parameters have been obtained from a comparison with a grid of NLTE model atmospheres. The best fit was found for Teff = 14,000 K, log g = 3.5, and v sin i = 170 km s-1. These values together with a Hipparcos parallax lead to a stellar mass M = 4.8±0.8 M and radius R = 6.4±0.5 R. It is encouraging to see that these values agree well with the expected evolutionary mass and radius for the effective temperature we derived. Long-term variations of  Dra were analysed using measurements of equivalent widths, central intensities, peak intensities of emission lines and emission peak velocity differences for H, H, H, H, and some helium, silicon, and iron lines. It turned out that the previously reported period of 23 years in the variation of the emission strength is probably a cyclic, not a strictly periodic phenomenon. An attempt to find out a period from all available records of the H emission strength led to a value of 8044±167 days (22.0 years) but the phase plots show that each cycle has a different shape and length. The maximum strength of the emission lags behind the brightness maximum. This is a behaviour usually observed for long-term changes of Be stars with a positive correlation between the brightness and emission strength. Since there are obviously no published speckle observations of the star, we suggest these should be carried out. They could help to deny or confirm the possibility that the emission episodes are triggered by a periastron passage of a putative binary companion moving in an eccentric orbit with a 8044-d period, as it seems to be the case for some Be binaries. For the moment, the nature and origin of the disk around  Dra still remains unknown. From the comparison of the electronic spectra obtained at different phases of the long-term cycle and synthetic spectra it appears that there are no detectable changes in the photospheric part of the Balmer lines related to variations in the Balmer emission strength which could be attributed to an extended photosphere corresponding to inner parts of the disk, optically thick in continuum.

Accepted by A&A
Preprints from kubat@sunstel.asu.cas.cz
or on the web at http://arxiv.org/abs/astro-ph/0401491


Last modified: February 29, 2004

David McDavid
dam3ma@virginia.edu