Abstract
Optical high-resolution 2.7-m McDonald Observatory observations of Epsilon Aur obtained during the 1982-1985 eclipse are discussed, with focus on the K I resonance lines, some Fe II and Ti II lines in the blue, and the near-infrared N I excitation lines. The N I lines are immune to contamination by the secondary, and their radial velocity decline over the three-year interval fits the predicted velocity curve. The 7664 A and 7699 A K I lines strengthen greatly during the eclipse due to gas in orbit around the secondary passing in front of the primary, and the velocity pattern analysis indicates a mass of the secondary to solar mass ratio of between about 3 and 6 and a primary mass of 3 solar masses. The data are consistent with the picture of a low-mass post-AGB primary having lost mass through a wind and by Roche-lobe transfer to the secondary, and which will evolve to a white dwarf in less than 10,000 years.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Lambert, D. L., & Sawyer, S. R. (1986). Epsilon Aurigae in eclipse. II - Optical absorption lines from the secondary. Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific, 98, 389. https://doi.org/10.1086/131770
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