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P45 |
March 2000
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To be published in:
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
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Coordinated Monitoring of the Eccentric O-star Binary
Iota Orionis.
Optical Spectroscopy and Photometry
S.V. Marchenko1,
G. Rauw2,*,
E.A. Antokhina3,
I.I. Antokhin3,
D. Ballereau4,
J. Chauville4,
M.F. Corcoran5,
R. Costero6,
J. Echevarria6,
T. Eversberg1,
K.G. Gayley7,
G. Koenigsberger6,
A.S. Miroshnichenko8,
A.F.J. Moffat1,
N.I. Morrell9,
N.D. Morrison8,
C.L. Mulliss8,
J.M. Pittard10,
I.R. Stevens10,
J.-M. Vreux2 and
J. Zorec11
1 Département de Physique, Université de Montréal, C.P. 6128, Succursale Centre-Ville, Montréal, QC H3C 3J7, Canada, and Observatoire du Mont Mégantic
2 Institut d'Astrophysique et de Géophysique - Université de Liège, Avenue de Cointe 5, 4000 Liège, Belgium
3 Moscow State University, Sternberg State Astronomical Institute, Universitetskij Prospect 13, 119899, Moscow, Russia
4 Observatoire de Paris-Meudon, DASGAL, F-92125 Meudon Principal Cedex, France
5 Universities Space Research Association/Laboratory for High Energy Astrophysics, GSFC, Greenbelt, MD 20771, USA
6 Instituto de Astronomía, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, J. J. Tablada 1006, Colonia Lomas de Santa Maria, 58090 Morelia, Michoacán, México
7 University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52245
8 Ritter Observatory, The University of Toledo, Toledo, OH 43606, USA
9 Observatorio de La Plata, 1900 La Plata, Argentina
10 School of Physics and Astronomy, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham, B15 2TT, UK
11 Institut d'Astrophysique, 98bis boulevard Arago, 75014 Paris, France
* Chargé de Recherches FNRS, Belgium
With the objective of investigating the wind-wind collision phenomenon
and supporting contemporaneous X-ray observations (cf. Pittard et al.
2000), we organized a large-scale, coordinated optical monitoring campaign
of the massive, highly eccentric O9III+B1III binary Iota Orionis.
Successfully separating the spectra of the components, we refine the
orbital elements and confirm the rapid apsidal motion in the system.
We also see strong interaction between the components during periastron
passage and detect phase-locked variability in the spectrum of the
secondary star. However, we find no unambiguous signs of the bow shock
crashing on the surface of the secondary, despite the predictions of
hydrodynamic simulations. Combining all available photometric data, we
find rapid, phase-locked variations and model them numerically, thus
restricting the orbital inclination to 50° i 70°.
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