Changes in the Na D 1 Absorption Components of η Carinae Provide Clues on the Location of the Dissipating Central Occulter

  • Pickett C
  • Richardson N
  • Gull T
  • et al.
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Abstract

The Na D absorption doublet in the spectrum of η Carinae is complex, with multiple absorption features associated with the Great Eruption (1840s), the Lesser Eruption (1890s), and the interstellar clouds. The velocity profile is further complicated by the P Cygni profile originating in the system’s stellar winds and blending with the He i λ 5876 profile. The Na D profile contains a multitude of absorption components, including those at velocities of −145 km s −1 , −168 km s −1 , and +87 km s −1 , which we concentrate on in this analysis. Ground-based spectra recorded from 2008 to 2021 show significant variability of the −145 km s −1 absorption throughout long-term observations. In the high-ionization phases of η Carinae prior to the 2020 periastron passage, this feature disappeared completely but briefly reappeared across the 2020 periastron, along with a second absorption at −168 km s −1 . Over the past few decades, η Carinae has been gradually brightening, which is shown to be caused by a dissipating occulter. The decreasing absorption of the −145 km s −1 component, coupled with similar trends seen in absorptions of ultraviolet resonant lines, indicate that this central occulter was possibly a large clump associated with the Little Homunculus or another clump between the Little Homunculus and the star. We also report on a foreground absorption component at +87 km s −1 . Comparison of Na D absorption in the spectra of nearby systems demonstrates that this redshifted component likely originates in an extended foreground structure consistent with a previous ultraviolet spectral survey in the Carina Nebula.

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Pickett, C. S., Richardson, N. D., Gull, T. R., Hillier, D. J., Hartman, H., Ibrahim, N., … Weigelt, G. (2022). Changes in the Na D 1 Absorption Components of η Carinae Provide Clues on the Location of the Dissipating Central Occulter. The Astrophysical Journal, 937(2), 85. https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ac898f

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