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arxiv: 1805.03301 · v1 · pith:XD5YAS7Znew · submitted 2018-05-08 · 🌌 astro-ph.SR

Binarity and Accretion in AGB Stars: HST/STIS Observations of UV Flickering in Y Gem

classification 🌌 astro-ph.SR
keywords accretionbinaritycontinuumdiskemissionfeaturesobservationsstar
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Binarity is believed to dramatically affect the history and geometry of mass loss in AGB and post-AGB stars, but observational evidence of binarity is sorely lacking. As part of a project to search for hot binary companions to cool AGB stars using the GALEX archive, we discovered a late-M star, Y Gem, to be a source of strong and variable UV and X-ray emission. Here we report UV spectroscopic observations of Y Gem obtained with the Hubble Space Telescope that show strong flickering in the UV continuum on time-scales of <~20 s, characteristic of an active accretion disk. Several UV lines with P-Cygni-type profiles from species such as Si IV and C IV are also observed, with emission and absorption features that are red- and blue- shifted by velocities of ~500 km/s from the systemic velocity. Our model for these (and previous) observations is that material from the primary star is gravitationally captured by a companion, producing a hot accretion disk. The latter powers a fast outflow that produces blue-shifted features due to absorption of UV continuum emitted by the disk, whereas the red-shifted emission features arise in heated infalling material from the primary. The outflow velocities support a previous inference by Sahai et al. (2015) that Y Gem's companion is a low-mass main-sequence star. Blackbody fitting of the UV continuum implies an accretion luminosity of about 13 Lsun and thus a mass-accretion rate >5e-7 Msun/yr; we infer that Roche lobe overflow is the most likely binary accretion mode for Y Gem.

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