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Eta Carinae


Synopsis:  Variable star and associated nebula (NGC 3372); located in Carina; R.A. 10:45:03.59, dec. -59:41:04.3; culmination 15 April; magnitude 6 to 8 (irregular); distance ???  (Naeye 1997) to ??? (Ridpath & Tirion 1984) pc (approx. 8000 to 9000 light years).

 

Description: The enigmatic h Carinae is believed to represent an important though short-lived, unstable phase in the life of the most massive stars: the Luminous Blue Variable (LBV) phase.

Eta Carinae is an extreme star, even by the standards of LBVs. There is speculation that it may be a binary, though this is by no means certain. If single, on the other hand, h Carinae is one of the most massive stars known, having a mass of 120 M¤ (see Damineli 1996 for references).

It is one of the most luminous stellar objects of our Galaxy, having a luminosity of 5 ´ 106 L¤.

The spectrum is obscured by surrounding shells of ejected material (it was recorded as an F type supergiant in the 1890s; now it displays neither absorption nor emission lines in the optical part of the spectrum) but it is almost certainly type O or possibly B. The ejected material absorbs much of the energetic short wavelength radiation from the star, and re-radiates it as red and infrared, thereby disguising the ‘true’ spectrum.

The spectrum of h Carinae indicates nitrogen enrichment, suggesting the presence of core material in the photosphere.

LBVs in general exhibit some periodicity, and the mean periods may be inversely proportional to the stars’ luminosities. Damineli 1996 describes spectroscopic and near-infrared studies of Eta Carinae itself, deriving strong evidence for a stable 5.52 year cycle in Eta Carinae which is roughly consistent with Stothers and Chin’s (1995) ‘3 – 5 years’ period (also see Luminous Blue Variables).

The last shell event of 1992 (see Damineli 1996 for references) was followed by an enhancement of flux in the radio wavelength range and by the reappearance of the stellar source in hard X-rays. A binary scenario was sometimes invoked to explain some features of the optical light curve, but this hypothesis is not supported by the observations.

<update since 1997!>

Predicted (Year) Observed (Year) Type of Event
1827.01 1827.1 mag = 1.0, marked peak
1838.03 1838.0 mag = 0.2, marked peak
1843.55 1843.2 mag = -1.0, highest peak
1948.30 1948.30 He I, [Ne III], [Fe III] disappeared
1964.85 1965.2 He I, [Ne III], [Fe III] faded out
1975.88 1976.1 Photometric local max, H band
1975.88 1976.3 Photometric local max, V band
1981.40 1981.49 [Fe III] disappeared; N III], Si III] faint
1981.40 1981.62 Photometric local max, J, H, K, L
1981.40 1981.89 Photometric local max, V band
1986.91 1987.09 Photometric local max, J, H, K
1986.91 1987.04 He I l l 10830, 5876 very faint
1992.42 1992.42 [Ar III], [Fe III], He I disappeared
1992.42 1992.30 Photometric local max, H band
1992.42 1992.4 Hard X-ray minimum
1992.42 1992.49 Radio flux minimum
1997.94 ... Next predicted event
Table 1:  Events of Low Excitation or Photometric Peaks (after Damineli 1996, Table 2).
In addition to the many smaller events which make up the bulk of the preceding table, Eta Carinae has undergone giant bursts in the last centuries. A Sumerian recording of a ‘new star’ in 3000 B.C. is possibly attributable to Eta Carinae (Naeye 1997). In 1837, Eta Carinae flared up, peaking second only to Sirius at magnitude -0.8, in 1843. It remained at first magnitude for around 20 years, but has since settled back around 6 to 8.

Eta Carinae is a very strongly mass losing star, even by LBV or Wolf-Rayet standards. It "probably lost 2 - 3 M¤ during its famous 1840’s outburst and its current mass loss rate is estimated at 10-4 to 10-3 M¤ /yr" (Humphreys 1989, p. 5).

Homunculus Nebula

The star is now surrounded by a shell of gas ejected in the 1837 outburst, known as the Homunculus Nebula, spectacularly revealed in the now-famous HST photograph of June 1996 (right).  The Homunculus is mainly a reflecting nebula comprising some 2 to 3 M¤, which is apparently produced by a bipolar outflow from Eta Carinae, and expanding at around 650 km/sec (Naeye 1997, Frank 1997, see Damineli 1996 for further references).

"The putative binary system believed to constitute h Carinae survived an outburst in the previous century that lasted 20 years; and which created a nebula with pronounced bipolar lobes that together contain about 2.5 solar masses of material. The nebula also exhibits an equatorial 'waist' containing 0.5 solar masses. the physical mechanisms responsible for the outburst and bipolar geometry are not understood. Here we report infrared observations (spectroscopy and imaging) that reveal the presence of about 15 solar masses of material, located in an equatorial torus. the massive torus may have been created through highly non-conservative mass transfer, which removed the entire envelope of one of the stars, leaving an unstable core that erupted in the nineteenth century. The collision of the erupted material with the pre-existing torus provides a natural explanation for the bipolar shape of the nebula" (Morris et al. 1999, p. 502).

<insert>Fig 1: HST photograph of the Homunculus Nebula. This image and others (including a stereoscopic version prepared by taking two images some months apart) clearly show the hourglass shape of the two giant, roughly spherical lobes of eject, with the bottom left lobe in the foreground and the top right lobe tilted away. Eta Carinae itself is the bright spot in the centre. Also visible is an equatorial disk of material which is possibly older – dating from an earlier outburst – denser, and slower moving, and has constricted the expansion of the younger, faster moving material which forms the lobes.
Property Value Notes/References
SAO Number 238429  
HD Number 93308  
R.A. 10:45:03.59  
Declination -59:41:04.3  
Precession in RA/10 yrs    
Precession in dec./10 yrs    
Proper Motion RA    
Proper Motion dec    
Radial Velocity ??? km/s  
Parallax    
Distance ??? kpc  
mv    
Mv -9.42  
M/M¤ ~120  
L/L¤    
B-V 0.04  
U-B    
V-R    
R-I    
b-y    
m1    
c1    
Hbeta    
Spectral Type    
R/R¤    
Teff    
Rotational Velocity ??? km/s  
Period    
Table 1: Known Parameters for object name

Notes: Proper motion in R.A. includes the cos(dec) term

(After ???.)

Eta Carinae is considered to be highly unstable and a strong supernova candidate. The likelihood of a supernova within the next few 105 years adds further interest to Damineli’s next predicted event, in December 1997.
Observation: ....

References

Morris, P.W.; Waters, L.B.F.M.; Barlow, M.J.; Lim, T.; de Koter, A.; Voors, R.H.M.; Cox, P.; de Graauw, Th.; Henning, Th.; Hony, S.; Lamers, H.J.G.L.M.; Mutschke, H.; Trams, N.R. 1999: Discovery of a Massive Equatorial Torus in the h Carinae Stellar System. Nature 402: 502-504.

Naeye 1997: Astronomy or Sky & Telescope article.


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