INVESTIGADORES
CIDALE Lydia Sonia
artículos
Título:
Critical study of the distribution of rotational velocities of Be stars; II: Differential rotation and some hidden effects interfering with the interpretation of the V sin i parameter
Autor/es:
ZOREC, J,; DOMINICIANO DE SOUZA, A.; ROYER, F.; CIDALE, L.; HUBERT, A. M,; SEMAAN, T.; MARTAYAN, C.; COCHETTI, Y.; ARIAS, M. L.; AIDELMAN, Y.; STEE, P.
Revista:
ASTRONOMY AND ASTROPHYSICS
Editorial:
EDP SCIENCES S A
Referencias:
Lugar: Paris; Año: 2017 vol. 602 p. 1 - 21
ISSN:
0004-6361
Resumen:
Aims. We assume that stars may undergo surface differential rotation to study its impact on the interpretation of Vsin i and on the observed distribution Φ(u) of ratios of true rotational velocities u = V/Vc (Vc is the equatorial critical velocity). We discuss some phenomena affecting the formation of spectral lines and their broadening, which can obliterate the information carried by Vsin iconcerning the actual stellar rotation.Methods. We studied the line broadening produced by several differential rotational laws, but adopted Maunder?s expression Ω(θ) = Ωo(1 + α cos2θ) as an attempt to account for all of these laws with the lowest possible number of free parameters. We studied the effect of the differential rotation parameter α on the measured Vsin i parameter and on the distribution Φ(u) of ratios u = V/Vc.Results. We conclude that the inferred Vsin i is smaller than implied by the actual equatorial linear rotation velocity Veq if the stars rotate with α < 0, but is larger if the stars have α > 0. For a given |α| the deviations of Vsin i are larger when α < 0. If the studied Be stars have on average α < 0, the number of rotators with Veq ´ 0.9Vc is larger than expected from the observed distribution Φ(u); if these stars have on average α > 0, this number is lower than expected. We discuss seven phenomena that contribute either to narrowor broaden spectral lines, which blur the information on the rotation carried by Vsin i and, in particular, to decide whether the Be phenomenon mostly rely on the critical rotation. We show that two-dimensional radiation transfer calculations are needed in rapid rotators to diagnose the stellar rotation more reliably.