Samer Kanaan
Valparaiso University
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Featured researches published by Samer Kanaan.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2011
F. Millour; Anthony Meilland; O. Chesneau; P. Stee; Samer Kanaan; Romain G. Petrov; D. Mourard; Stefan Kraus
Context. To progress in the understanding of evolution of massive stars one needs to constrain the mass-loss and determine the phenomenon responsible for the ejection of matter an its reorganization in the circumstellar environment Aims. In order to test various mass-ejection processes, we probed the geometry and kinematics of the dust and gas surrounding the A[e] supergiant HD 62623. Methods. We used the combined high spectral and spatial resolution offered by the VLTI/AMBER instrument. Thanks to a new multiwavelength optical/IR interferometry imaging technique, we reconstructed the first velocity-resolved images with a milliarcsecond resolution in the infrared domain. Results. We managed to disentangle the dust and gas emission in the HD 62623 circumstellar disc. We measured the dusty disc inner rim, i.e. 6 mas, constrained the inclination angle and the position angle of the major-axis of the disc. We also measured the inner gaseous disc extension (2 mas) and probed its velocity field thanks to AMBER high spectral resolution. We find that the expansion velocity is negligible, and that Keplerian rotation is a favoured velocity field. Such a velocity field is unexpected if fast rotation of the central star alone is the main mechanism of matter ejection. Conclusions. As the star itself seems to rotate below its breakup-up velocity, rotation cannot explain the formation of the dense equatorial disc. Moreover, as the expansion velocity is negligible, radiatively driven wind is also not a suitable explanation to explain the disc formation. Consequently, the most probable hypothesis is that the accumulation of matter in the equatorial plane is due to the presence of the spectroscopic low mass companion.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2012
A. Meilland; F. Millour; Samer Kanaan; P. Stee; Romain G. Petrov; Karl-Heinz Hofmann; A. Natta; K. Perraut
Context. Classical Be stars are hot non-supergiant stars surrounded by a gaseous circumstellar disk that is responsible for the observed infrared-excess and emission lines. The phenomena involved in the disk formation still remain highly debated. Aims. To progress in the understanding of the physical process or processes responsible for the mass ejections and test the hypothesis that they depend on the stellar parameters, we initiated a survey on the circumstellar environment of the brightest Be stars. Methods. To achieve this goal, we used spectro-interferometry, the only technique that combines high spectral (R = 12 000) and high spatial (θmin = 4 mas) resolutions. Observations were carried out at the Paranal observatory with the VLTI/AMBER instrument. We concentrated our observations on the Brγ emission line to be able to study the kinematics within the circumstellar disk. Our sample is composed of eight bright classical Be stars: α Col, κ CMa, ω Car, p Car, δ Cen, μ Cen, α Ara, and o Aqr. Results. We managed to determine the disk extension in the line and the nearby continuum for most targets. We also constrained the disk kinematics, showing that it is dominated by rotation with a rotation law close to the Keplerian one. Our survey also suggests that these stars are rotating at a mean velocity of V/Vc = 0.82 ± 0.08. This corresponds to a rotational rate of Ω/Ωc = 0.95 ± 0.02. Conclusions. We did not detect any correlation between the stellar parameters and the structure of the circumstellar environment. Moreover, it seems that a simple model of a geometrically thin Keplerian disk can explain most of our spectrally resolved K-band data. Nevertheless, some small departures from this model have been detected for at least two objects (i.e., κ CMa and α Col). Finally, our Be stars sample suggests that rotation is the main physical process driving the mass-ejection. Nevertheless, smaller effects from other mechanisms have to be taken into account to fully explain how the residual gravity is compensated.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2014
O. Chesneau; A. Meilland; E. Chapellier; F. Millour; A. M. van Genderen; Yaël Nazé; Nathan Smith; A. Spang; Jonathan Smoker; L. Dessart; Samer Kanaan; Ph. Bendjoya; M. W. Feast; Jose H. Groh; A. Lobel; N. Nardetto; S. Otero; R. D. Oudmaijer; A. G. Tekola; Patricia A. Whitelock; C. Arcos; Michel Cure; Leonardo Vanzi
We initiated long-term optical interferometry monitoring of the diameters of unstable yellow hypergiants (YHG) with the goal of detecting both the long-term evolution of their radius and shorter term formation related to large mass-loss events. We observed HR5171 A with AMBER/VLTI. We also examined archival photometric data in the visual and near-IR spanning more than 60 years, as well as sparse spectroscopic data. HR5171A exhibits a complex appearance. Our AMBER data reveal a surprisingly large star for a YHG R*=1315+/-260Rsun\ (~6.1AU) at the distance of 3.6+/-0.5kpc. The source is surrounded by an extended nebulosity, and these data also show a large level of asymmetry in the brightness distribution of the system, which we attribute to a newly discovered companion star located in front of the primary star. The companions signature is also detected in the visual photometry, which indicates an orbital period of Porb=1304+/-6d. Modeling the light curve with the NIGHTFALL program provides clear evidence that the system is a contact or possibly over-contact eclipsing binary. A total current system mass of 39^{+40}_{-22} solar mass and a high mass ratio q>10 is inferred for the system. The low-mass companion of HR5171 A is very close to the primary star that is embedded within its dense wind. Tight constraints on the inclination and vsini of the primary are lacking, which prevents us from determining its influence precisely on the mass-loss phenomenon, but the system is probably experiencing a wind Roche-Lobe overflow. Depending on the amount of angular momentum that can be transferred to the stellar envelope, HR5171 A may become a fast-rotating B[e]/Luminous Blue Variable (LBV)/Wolf-Rayet star. In any case, HR5171 A highlights the possible importance of binaries for interpreting the unstable YHGs and for massive star evolution in general.
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2012
Lydia Cidale; M. Borges Fernandes; I. Andruchow; M. L. Arias; M. Kraus; O. Chesneau; Samer Kanaan; Michel Cure; W. J. de Wit; M. F. Muratore
Context. The formation and evolution of gas and dust environments around B[e] supergiants are still open issues. Aims. We intend to study the geometry, kinematics and physical structure of the circumstellar environment (CE) of the B[e] supergiant CPD−52 9243 to provide further insights into the underlying mechanism causing the B[e] phenomenon. Methods. The influence of the different physical mechanisms acting on the CE (radiation pressure, rotation, bi-stability or tidal forces) is somehow reflected in the shape and kinematic properties of the gas and dust regions (flaring, Keplerian, accretion or outflowing disks). To investigate these processes we mainly used quasi-simultaneous observations taken with high spatial resolution optical long-baseline interferometry (VLTI/MIDI), near-IR spectroscopy of CO bandhead features (Gemini/Phoenix and VLT/CRIRES) and optical spectra (CASLEO/REOSC). Results. High angular resolution interferometric measurements obtained with VLTI/MIDI provide strong support for the presence of a dusty disk(ring)-like structure around CPD−52 9243, with an upper limit for its inner edge of ∼ 8m as (∼27.5 AU, considering a distance of 3.44 kpc to the star). The disk has an inclination angle with respect to the line of sight of 46 ± 7 ◦ . The study of CO first overtone bandhead evidences a disk structure in Keplerian rotation. The optical spectrum indicates a rapid outflow in the polar direction. Conclusions. The IR emission (CO and warm dust) indicates Keplerian rotation in a circumstellar disk while the optical line transitions of various species are consistent with a polar wind. Both structures appear simultaneously and provide further evidence for the proposed paradigms of the mass-loss in supergiant B[e] stars. The presence of a detached cold CO ring around CPD–52 9243 could be due to a truncation of the inner disk caused by a companion, located possibly interior to the disk rim, clearing the center of the system. More spectroscopic and interferometric data are necessary to determine a possible binary nature of the star.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2017
C. Arcos; C. E. Jones; T. A. A. Sigut; Samer Kanaan; Michel Cure
The circumstellar disk density distributions for a sample of 63 Be southern stars from the BeSOS survey were found by modelling their H
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2018
M. Haucke; L. S. Cidale; R. O. Venero; Michel Cure; M. Kraus; Samer Kanaan; C. Arcos
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Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union | 2014
M. Haucke; I. Araya; C. Arcos; Michel Cure; L. S. Cidale; Samer Kanaan; R. O. Venero; M. Kraus
emission line profiles. These disk densities were used to compute disk masses and disk angular momenta for the sample. Average values for the disk mass are 3.4
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2011
Anthony Meilland; O. Delaa; P. Stee; Samer Kanaan; F. Millour; D. Mourard; D. Bonneau; Romain G. Petrov; N. Nardetto; A. Marcotto; Jean-Michel Clausse; K. Perraut; H. McAlister; Theo A. ten Brummelaar; J. Sturmann; L. Sturmann; Neal J. Turner; S. T. Ridgway; C. Farrington; P. J. Goldfinger
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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2018
C. Arcos; Samer Kanaan; J. Chávez; Leonardo Vanzi; Ignacio Araya; Michel Cure
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Revista Mexicana De Astronomia Y Astrofisica | 2014
Samer Kanaan; A. Meilland; F. Millour; M. Cure; O. Chesneau; Ph. Stee; M. Borges; L. S. Cidale; C. Arcos
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