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Archive | 1977

Close Binary Stars

Roger Hilsen Koch; V. Piirola; D. M. Gibson; P. C. Gregory; Sun Kwok; E. R. Seaquist; Y. Kondo; George E. McCluskey; Kam-Ching Leung; R. W. Hilditch; Graham Hill; Daniel M. Popper; K. O. Wright; R. Faraggiana; H. F. Henrichs; E. P. J. van den Heuvel; D. B. Wood; E. Budding; H. Al-Naimiy

During the XIXth General Assembly of the IAU in Delhi the number of members of Commission 42 increased to 260. This simply reflects the growing interest and importance of our field. Growing is not only the number of astronomers involved in research on CBS but also the number of papers resulting from that activity. As an example one can quote the numbers of papers listed during the last few years in Sections 117 (Close Binaries), 119 (Eclipsing Binaries), and 120 (Spectroscopic Binaries) of the Astronomy and Astrophysics Abstracts: 705(1982), 775(1983), 836(1984), 1080(1985), and 911(1986); note that many additional references could be added to these numbers from other sections. Naturally, such numbers alone do not reflect the quality and even less so the position and significance of the CBS field. Here one could perhaps mention an impressive record of successful research proposals involving requests for the observing time on large, ground based telescopes and on space instruments. Indeed, in spite of a very strong competition from other fields, programs involving CBS are usually placed very high on the priority lists (cf. Sections 2D and 2E). Obviously, the close binary systems, their evolution, and the physical processes which occur in them (accretion, stellar winds, nuclear burning, etc) appear interesting and important not only to those who are involved in their studies but also to astronomers from other fields.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1994

Ultraviolet light curves of beta Lyrae: Comparison of OAO A-2, IUE, and Voyager Observations

Y. Kondo; George E. McCluskey; Jeffery M. S. Silvis; Ronald S. Polidan; Carolina P. S. Mccluskey; Joel A. Eaton

The six-band ultraviolet light curves of beta Lyrae obtained with the Orbiting Astronomical Observatory (OAO) A-2 in 1970 exhibited a very unusual behavior. The secondary minimum deepened at shorter wavelength, indicating that one was not observing light variations caused primarily by the eclipses of two stars having a roughly Planckian energy distribution. It was then suggested that the light variations were caused by a viewing angle effect of an optically thick, ellipsoidal circumbinary gas cloud. Since 1978 beta Lyrae has been observed with the International Ultraviolet Explorer (IUE) satellite. We have constructed ultraviolet light curves from the IUE archival data for comparison with the OAO A-2 results. We find that they are in substantial agreement with each other. The Voyager ultraviolet spectrometer was also used to observe this binary during a period covered by IUE observations. The Voyager results agree with those of the two other satellite observatories at wavelengths longer than about 1350 A. However, in the wavelength region shorter than the Lyman-alpha line at 1216 A, the light curves at 1085 and 965 A show virtually no light variation except an apparent flaring near phase 0.7, which is also in evidence at longer wavelengths. We suggest that the optically thick circumbinary gas cloud, which envelops the two stars completely, assumes a roughly spherical shape when observed at these shorter wavelengths.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1986

IUE observations of V Sagittae

Robert H. Koch; M. F. Corcoran; B. D. Holenstein; George E. McCluskey

Observations of the nova-like variable V Sge are discussed, and the ground-based light curve is analyzed, compensating for the component interaction effect. Low-dispersion IUE spectra indicate that interstellar reddening is smaller than suggested from visible-band observations. The UV and visible continuum are modeled by a He-rich model and by a simple accretion disk, and the UV spectrum emission lines are used to determine ionization temperatures and a lower N(e) limit. The present data are consistent with the picture of the companion to the He star being embedded in an accretion disk, with the disk being large (of dimension comparable to that of the embedding Roche lobe as a result of vigorous mass transfer) at the time of the ground-based data, and with the disk having been diminished to a radius of the order of 200 times of the neutron star, at the time of the IUE spectra.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1979

IUE observations of gas stream effects in the ultraviolet spectrum of U Cephei

Y. Kondo; George E. McCluskey; Robert E. Stencel

The eclipsing binary U Cephei has been observed with the International Ultraviolet Explorer (IUE) satellite. Nine high resolution spectra in the mid-ultraviolet (AA1900-3200) and one high resolution spectrum in the far-ultraviolet (AA1200-1900) were obtained. The effects of gas streaming are clearly seen in the mid-ultraviolet resonance lines of Fe n (A2599) and Mg n (AA2795 and 2802). The data indicate that much of the gas leaving the G star circles behind the B star and leaves the system. It is suggested that g-mode oscillations in the G star supply part of the energy required to drive the gas out of the system. Subject headings: stars: eclipsing binaries — stars: individual — ultraviolet: spectra


Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 1984

OBSERVATIONS OF EIGHT CLOSE BINARIES WITH THE EINSTEIN OBSERVATORY

George E. McCluskey; Y. Kondo

Eight close binaries were observed with the Imaging Proportional Counter aboard the Einstein Observatory. The binaries R Ara, Zeta Aur, RZ Cas, 31 Cyg, Delta Lib, U Sge, RZ Sct, and RW Tau all show strong indications of active mass flow in their ground-based and/or ultraviolet spectra. The systems R Ara, RZ Cas, 31 Cyg, Delta Lib, and U Sge were detected as X-ray sources while only upper limits on the X-ray luminosities of Zeta Aur, RZ Sct, and RW Tau could be determined. Nondetection of the latter three is probably attributable to their distance. With the exception of 31 Cyg which has an X-ray luminosity of about 10 to the 32nd erg/s, the detected sources have X-ray luminosities in the range 10 to the 30th-31st erg/s. These luminosities are approximately equal to those observed for single stars of similar spectral types. It appears that the X-ray luminosity of 31 Cyg is at least 60 times higher than that of Zeta Aur.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1985

Variable, optically thick plasma in the interacting binaries R Arae and HD 207739

Y. Kondo; George E. McCluskey; S. B. Parsons

Attention is given to observational evidence for the presence of variable and optically thick extrastellar gas in two binary stars, R Arae and HD 207739, which appear to be in the evolutionary phase immediately preceding or following the short lived supercritical mass transfer phase. In both binaries, spectral lines and energy distributions are variable outside eclipse. 27 references.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1980

Interstellar C IV and Si IV column densities toward early-type stars

Frederick C. Bruhweiler; Y. Kondo; George E. McCluskey

Equivalent widths and deduced column densities of Si IV and C IV are examined for 18 early-type close binaries, and physical processes responsible for the origin of these ions in the interstellar medium are investigated. The available C IV/Si IV column density ratios typically lie within a narrow range from 0.8 to 4.5, and there is evidence that the column density of C IV is higher than that of N V along most lines of sight, suggesting that C IV is not formed in the same hot region as O VI. In addition, the existence of regions with a narrowly defined new temperature range around 50,000 deg K is indicated. The detection of the semitorrid gas of Bruhweiler, Kondo, and McCluskey (1978, 1979) is substantiated, and the relation of this gas to the observations of coronal gas in the galactic halo is discussed.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2010

Ultraviolet study of the active interacting binary star R Arae using archival IUE data

Phillip A. Reed; George E. McCluskey; Y. Kondo; Jorge Sahade; Edward F. Guinan; Alvaro Gimenez; Daniel B. Caton; Daniel E. Reichart; Kevin Ivarsen; Melissa C. Nysewander

The eclipsing and strongly interacting binary star system R Arae (HD 149730) is in a very active and very short-lived stage of its evolution. R Ara consists of a B9V primary and an unknown secondary. We have collected the International Ultraviolet Explorer (IUE) archival data on R Ara, with most of the data being studied for the first time. There are 117 high-resolution IUE spectra taken in 1980, 1982, 1985, 1989 and 1991. We provide photometric and spectroscopic evidence for mass transfer and propose a geometry for the accretion structure. We use colour-scale radial velocity plots to view the complicated behaviour of the blended absorption features and to distinguish the motions of hotter and cooler regions within the system. We observed a primary eclipse of R Ara in 2008 and have verified that its period is increasing. A model of the system and its evolutionary status is presented.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1976

Mass flow in the O7f binary UW Canis Majoris. II

George E. McCluskey; Y. Kondo

The far-ultraviolet spectrum of UW CMa was obtained from the telescope spectrometer on the Copernicus satellite at about phase 0.25 in order to supplement earlier observations of the same kind made near phase 0.75. Analysis of the data shows that the high-temperature gas giving rise to the P Cygni features in the far-ultraviolet spectrum is located primarily around the entire binary system and does not share in the motion of either component. The effects of radiation pressure on the Roche (Jacobian) equipotential surfaces and in generating a stellar wind are discussed.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1988

IUE spectroscopy of U Cephei during the mass flow outburst of 1986 June

George E. McCluskey; Y. Kondo; Edward C. Olson

The interacting Algol-type binary U Cep underwent another of its irregularly occurring transient high-mass flow events during June 1986. For the first time, high-resolution ultraviolet spectroscopy of U Cep during such an event was possible. High-resolution spectra in the far-ultraviolet and near-ultraviolet were obtained with IUE. These spectra show that the ultraviolet continuum decreased by factors of 1.2 to 3.0 during the greatest activity. In addition, one or more narrow absorption components with radial velocities as high as -500 km/s appeared in association with a number of C, Si, Al, Fe, Zn, and Mg lines. The Mg II doublet developed a flat-bottomed appearance with a residual intensity of about 0.31 and a width of at least 800 km/s. These phenomena are interpreted in terms of high-velocity gas streams, mass loss from the system, and the formation of an optically thick equatorial bulge around the B star. 20 references.

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Y. Kondo

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Juergen Rahe

Goddard Space Flight Center

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S. B. Parsons

Johns Hopkins University

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Theodore Edwin Houck

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Jürgen Rahe

University of Erlangen-Nuremberg

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Daniel B. Caton

Appalachian State University

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