Pinwheel Nebula around WR 98[CLC]a[/CLC]
Open Access
- 10 November 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Astronomical Society in The Astrophysical Journal
- Vol. 525 (2) , L97-L100
- https://doi.org/10.1086/312352
Abstract
We present the first near-infrared images of the dusty Wolf-Rayet star WR 98a. Aperture-masking interferometry has been utilized to recover images at the diffraction limit of the Keck I telescope, 50 mas at 2.2 μm. Multiepoch observations spanning about 1 yr have resolved the dust shell into a "pinwheel" nebula, the second example of a new class of dust shell first discovered around WR 104 by Tuthill, Monnier, & Danchi. Interpreting the collimated dust outflow in terms of an interacting winds model, the binary orbital parameters and apparent wind speed are derived: a period of 565 ± 50 days, a viewing angle of 35° ± 6° from the pole, and a wind speed of 99 ± 23 mas yr-1. This period is consistent with a possible ~588 day periodicity in the infrared light curve, linking the photometric variation to the binary orbit. Important implications for binary stellar evolution are discussed by identifying WR 104 and WR 98a as members of a class of massive, short-period binaries whose orbits were circularized during a previous red supergiant phase. The current component separation in each system is similar to the diameter of a red supergiant, which indicates that the supergiant phase was likely terminated by Roche lobe overflow, leading to the present Wolf-Rayet stage.Keywords
All Related Versions
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Dust Formation in the Hot Massive Binary HD 192641 = WR 137 (WC7 + OB)The Astrophysical Journal, 1999
- Exact, Algebraic Solutions of the Thin-Shell Two-Wind Interaction ProblemThe Astrophysical Journal, 1996
- The First Diffraction-Limited Images from the W. M. Keck TelescopePublications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, 1996
- Multifrequency observations of the Wolf-Rayet star WR 146: another colliding-wind binary?Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 1996
- Dust Formation in Hot Stellar WindsPublished by Springer Nature ,1995
- The Near Infrared Camera on the W.M. Keck TelescopePublished by Springer Nature ,1994
- IRAS 17380 - 3031 - A new dusty late WC-type Wolf-Rayet starThe Astrophysical Journal, 1991
- An eight-year spectroscopic orbit for the WC7 + O4 Wolf-Rayet binary HD 193793 - Toward solving the mystery of the infrared outburstsThe Astrophysical Journal, 1987
- Closure phase in high-resolution optical imagingNature, 1986
- Maximum entropy method in image processingIEE Proceedings F Communications, Radar and Signal Processing, 1984