Hi Peredur:
Thanks for your input! WR134 is not a binary, though, as far as we know. It does show strong CIR effects, though, with P = 2.25d, presumably the rotation period (Morel et al. c. 2000). We won?t be monitoring WR138 this time, but do include WR135, a definitely (well, as far as we can tell!) single WC8 star with lots of wind clumps. I.e. we?ll be doing WR134, 135, 137. To monitor WR137 and 138 over a complete binary orbit (13 and about 5 yrs ? I don?t have its period at my finger-tips ? resp.) would take much longer than the 4 months? monitoring we propose here to examine clumping and CIRs, the main motivation.
Cheers, Tony
From: Peredur Williams (
fg-spek-convento@vds-astro.de)
Sent: Thursday, October 18, 2012 8:07 AM
To: fg-spek-convento@vds-astro.de (
fg-spek-convento@vds-astro.de)
Subject: [fg-spek] Re: IR observations of WR 134+135
Dear Bernard, Ian, Tony and all
I've just got back from travelling to see the spectra reaching out
to 1 micron, which is very exciting. It would be great to have
spectroscopy of the 10830 line but I agree very long integration
times would be needed. There are also atmospheric features in this
wavelength region so it would be necessary to observe a comparison
star at the same elevation, making it more difficult to pick up
subtle changes. WR134 and WR137 (but not WR138) have very strong
sub-peaks and deserve to be observed over time to look for changes
which may be caused by wind-collision effects in a binary but I
don't think this fits the current campaign.
Regards to all
Peredur
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Peredur Williams, Institute for Astronomy, University of Edinburgh
Royal Observatory, e-mail: pmw(==>)roe.ac.uk ([email]pmw(==>)roe.ac.uk[/email])
Blackford Hill, phone: (+44) (0) 131 668 8300
Edinburgh fax: (+44) (0) 131 668 8416
EH9 3HJ www:
http://www.roe.ac.uk/~pmw
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-----Original Message-----
From: Ian Stevens [mailto:fg-spek-convento(==>)vds-astro.de]
Sent: Monday, October 15, 2012 15:40
To: fg-spek-convento(==>)vds-astro.de ([email]fg-spek-convento(==>)vds-astro.de[/email])
Subject: [fg-spek] Re: IR observations of WR 134+135
Dear All - some more notes on the 10830 Angstrom line.
For more information on what you can do with the HeI 10830 line in WR
stars see the observations by Eenens and Williams
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1994MNRAS.269.1082E
who observed a sample of WR stars (including some of the current
campaign) and work I did with Ian Howarth
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1999MNRAS.302..549S
where we observed the variability of the HeI 10830 for a smaller sample of
WR stars.
The observations by Philippe and Perry were done with UKIRT (3.8m) and
the CGS2 instrument, while the later were done with the INT on La Palma
(2.5m) and a more standard spectrograph and CCD (and where the CCD
efficiency was dropping off very sharply with wavelength).
For the INT observations we did 6 WR stars. The exposures were typically
900-1800 secs and as you will see the SNR was not that great, but good
enough to see large scale changes in the line profiles. With a 0.5m
telescope the exposures will need to be VERY long to be useful.
Of the 6 stars, 5 were known WR+O binaries and showed major line profile
changes, associated with the wind-wind collision. The one that was not an
obvious binary (WR136) showed much less variability. Higher SNR would
probably help and enable us to see intrinsic wind variability, but the
exposure times will be extremely long (without a detector with a much
higher NIR efficiency). As has been mentioned before - that is the real
killer for this emission line. InSb arrays (or similar) may well become
more available for amateurs - indeed with a bit of digging you can have
an NIR photometer for 3000USD.
http://www.optecinc.com/astronomy/catalog/ssp/ssp4.htm
and maybe there is already something out there for NIR spectroscopy (but
it probably involves liquid nitrogen, which starts getting serious).
So, it would be interesting to see whether you can detect the line at
all with a standard CCD, but they will be challenging observations to be
useful (compared to 5696Angstrom, which is so much easier all round).
Cheers
ian
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dr. Ian Stevens
School of Physics & Astronomy Tel. +44 121 414 6450
University of Birmingham, Edgbaston Fax +44 121 414 3722
Birmingham B15 2TT, UK E-mail )star.sr.bham.ac.uk">irs(==>)star.sr.bham.ac.uk
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On Sat, 13 Oct 2012, Alexandros Filothodoros wrote:
:
Hello everyone
With a custom made IR spectrograph and a modded CANON EOS 350D(filter removed),we managed to go beyond 10000 A.
Next try will have to be with an FLI CCD,but it will have to wait until the Australia eclipse.
What resolution,SNR and dispersion should we aim at? The same as in the optical domain?
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