Warm water vapor envelope in Mira variables and its effects on the apparent size from the near-infrared to the mid-infrared

Ohnaka, K

Abstract

We present a possible interpretation for the increase of the angular diameter of the Mira variables o Cet, R Leo, and chi Cyg from the K band to the 11 mum region revealed by the recent interferometric observations using narrow bandpasses where no salient spectral feature is present (Weiner et al. 2003a,b). A simple two-layer model consisting of hot and cool H2O layers for the warm water vapor envelope, whose presence in Mira variables was revealed by previous spectroscopic observations, can reproduce the angular diameters observed with Infrared Spatial Interferometer as well as the high-resolution TEXES spectra obtained in the 11 mum region. The warm water vapor layers are optically thick in the lines, and therefore, strong absorption due to H2O can be expected from such a dense water vapor envelope. However, the absorption lines are filled in by emission from the extended part of the envelope, and this results in the high-resolution 11 mum spectra which exhibit only weak, fine spectral features, masking the spectroscopic evidences of the dense, warm water vapor envelope. On the other hand, the presence of the warm water vapor envelope manifests itself as the larger angular diameters in the 11 mum region as compared to those measured in the near-infrared. Furthermore, comparison of the visibilities predicted in the near-infrared (1.5-3.8 mum) with observational results available in the literature demonstrates that our two-layer model for the warm water vapor envelope can also reproduce the observed near-infrared visibilities and angular diameters, and suggests that the wavelength dependence of the angular size of Mira variables in the infrared largely reflects the H2O opacity. The radii of the hot H2O layers in the three Mira variables are derived to be 1.5-1.7 R-star with temperatures of 1800-2000 K and H2O column densities of (1-5) x 10(21) cm(-2), while the radii of the cool H2O layers are derived to be 2.2-2.5 R-star with temperatures of 1200-1400 K and H2O column densities of (1 -7) x 10(21) cm(-2).

Más información

Título según WOS: ID WOS:000224480900029 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volumen: 424
Número: 3
Editorial: EDP SCIENCES S A
Fecha de publicación: 2004
Página de inicio: 1011
Página final: 1024
DOI:

10.1051/0004-6361:20041207

Notas: ISI