The High Chromospheres of the Late A Stars
- 1 July 1997
- journal article
- Published by American Astronomical Society in The Astrophysical Journal
- Vol. 483 (1) , 435-438
- https://doi.org/10.1086/304251
Abstract
We report the detection of N V 1239 A transition region emission in HST/GHRS spectra of the A7 V stars, Alpha Aql and Alpha Cep. Our observations provide the first direct evidence of 1-3 x 10^5 K material in the atmospheres of normal A-type stars. For both stars, and for the mid-A--type star Tau3 Eri, we also report the detection of chromospheric emission in the Si III 1206 A line. At a B-V color of 0.16 and an effective temperature of 8200 K, Tau3 Eri becomes the hottest main sequence star known to have a chromosphere and thus an outer convection zone. We see no firm evidence that the Si III line surface fluxes of the A stars are any lower than those of moderately active, solar-type, G and K stars. This contrasts sharply with their coronal X-ray emission, which is >100 times weaker than that of the later-type stars. Given the strength of the N V emission observed here, it now appears unlikely that the X-ray faintness of the A stars is due to their forming very cool, <= 1 MK coronae. An alternative explanation in terms of mass loss in coronal winds remains a possibility, though we conclude from moderate resolution spectra of the Si III lines that such winds, if they exist, do not penetrate into the chromospheric Si III--forming layers of the star, since the profiles of these lines are *not* blueshifted, and may well be redshifted with respect to the star.Comment: LaTex, 12 pages, 3 Postscript figures, uses aaspp4, accepted by ApKeywords
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