Publications of the MPIfR
Optical & Infrared
Interferometry Group
Direct constraint on the
distance of γ2
Velorum from AMBER/VLTI observations
F.
Millour, R.G. Petrov, O. Chesneau,
D. Bonneau, L. Dessart, C. Bechet, I. Tallon-Bosc,
M. Tallon, E. Thiébaut, F. Vakili, F. Malbet, D. Mourard, P. Antonelli,
U. Beckmann, Y. Bresson,
A. Chelli, M. Dugué, G. Duvert, S. Gennari, L. Glück, P. Kern, S.
Lagarde, E. Le Coarer, F. Lisi,
K. Perraut, P. Puget, F. Rantakyrö, S. Robbe-Dubois, A. Roussel, E.
Tatulli, G. Weigelt,
G. Zins, M. Accardo, B. Acke, K. Agabi, E. Altariba, B. Arezki, E.
Aristidi, C. Baffa,
J. Behrend, T. Blöcker, S. Bonhomme, S. Busoni, F. Cassaing, J.-M.
Clausse, J. Colin, C. Connot,
A. Delboulbé, A. Domiciano de Souza, T. Driebe, P. Feautrier, D.
Ferruzzi, T. Forveille, E. Fossat,
R. Foy, D. Fraix-Burnet, A. Gallardo, E. Giani, C. Gil, A. Glentzlin,
M. Heiden, M. Heininger,
O. Hernandez Utrera, K.-H. Hofmann, D. Kamm, M. Kiekebusch, S. Kraus,
D. Le Contel, J.-M. Le
Contel, T. Lesourd, B. Lopez, M. Lopez, Y. Magnard, A. Marconi, G.
Mars,
G. Martinot-Lagarde, P. Mathias, P. Mège, J.-L. Monin, D. Mouillet, E.
Nussbaum, K. Ohnaka,
J. Pacheco, C. Perrier, Y. Rabbia, S. Rebattu, F. Reynaud, A. Richichi,
A. Robini,
M. Sacchettini, D. Schertl, M. Schöller, W. Solscheid, A. Spang, P.
Stee, P. Stefanini, D. Tasso,
L. Testi, O. von der Lühe, J.-C. Valtier, M. Vannier, and N. Ventura
Astronomy & Astrophysics, vol.464, pg.107-118
(2007)
Abstract
Context. Interferometry can provide spatially resolved
observations of massive star binary systems and their colliding winds,
which thus far have been studied mostly with spatially unresolved
observations.
Aims. We present the first AMBER/VLTI observations, taken at
orbital phase 0.32, of the Wolf-Rayet and O (WR+O) star binary system
Velorum
and use the interferometric observables to constrain its properties.
Methods. The AMBER/VLTI instrument was used with the telescopes
UT2, UT3, and UT4 on baselines ranging from 46 m to 85 m. It delivered
spectrally dispersed visibilities, as well as differential and closure
phases, with a resolution R=1500 in the spectral band 1.95-2.17
m. We
interpret these data in the context of a binary system with unresolved
components, neglecting in a first approximation the wind-wind collision
zone flux contribution.
Results. Using WR- and O-star synthetic spectra, we show that
the AMBER/VLTI observables result primarily from the contribution of
the individual components of the WR+O binary system. We discuss several
interpretations of the residuals, and speculate on the detection of an
additional continuum component, originating from the free-free emission
associated with the wind-wind collision zone (WWCZ), and contributing
at most to the observed K-band flux at the 5% level. Based
on the accurate spectroscopic orbit and the Hipparcos distance, the
expected absolute separation and position angle at the time of
observations were
mas
and
°,
respectively. However, using theoretical estimates for the spatial
extent of both continuum and line emission from each component, we
infer a separation of 3.62
+0.11-0.30 mas
and a position angle of 73
, compatible with the expected
one. Our analysis thus implies that the binary system lies at a
distance of 368
+38-13 pc, in
agreement with recent spectrophotometric estimates, but significantly
larger than the Hipparcos value of 258
+41-31 pc.
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