The variable Ca II absorption in ? Pictoris during 1998
S. I. Barnes, William Tobin and K. R. Pollard
Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia
17(3) 241 - 243
Published: 2000
Abstract
Variable absorption features were observed in the visible and ultraviolet spectrum of beta Pictoris soon after this star gained attention in the early 1980s due to its large IRAS infrared excess and the discovery, from optical imaging, of an edge-on dust disk. The absorption has been attributed to the evaporation of infalling planetesimals or comet-like bodies (the falling evaporating bodies, or FEB, hypothesis). With a view to confronting this hypothesis with fuller observations, we monitored the CaII H and K lines in beta Pictoris simultaneously during 1998, obtaining sequences of spectra on 50 nights. Variable absorption was usually present. The different oscillator strengths of the H and K lines permit the determination of covering factors, but detailed modelling is required to test whether all features can be explained by the FEB hypothesis. The blend of CaII H with Balmer HII means that the H and K photospheric profiles are different, and that the variable absorption features do not evolve in parallel. The behaviour of the variable absorption on November 27 is evocative of a body passing in front of the stellar disk in a prograde equatorial orbit.https://doi.org/10.1071/AS00036
© ASA 2000