论文标题
来自Carina Arm O和早期B星的远红色光谱的径向速度
Radial velocities from far red spectra of Carina Arm O and early B stars
论文作者
论文摘要
巨大的O和早期B恒星是近期恒星形成的重要标记,并通过光电离世和风在短暂的生命中以及它们以超新星的爆炸爆炸时对环境产生了重大影响。以银河系的方式可以在大距离内检测到它们,但通常位于大灰尘柱后面,使得在短波长中很难检测。在这项研究中,检查了较低的远红色光谱(8400-8800Å)进行径向速度测量的使用。据报道,在位于Carina臂上的2度场中的164个确认的OB恒星样品报告了结果。大多数恒星处于3至6 kpc之间的距离,Westerlund 2处于田野边缘。测得的径向速度的错误集中在3--10 km S $^{ - 1} $范围内,系统不确定性为2--3 km S $^{ - 1} $。这些与GAIA-MISSION ASTORMENERY结合使用,以构建完整的空间运动。尽管其中有8个可能是介入(到目前为止未发现)二进制文件,但最多有22颗恒星可能是逃亡者。样品的平均方位角运动与最近的银河盘旋转测量结果拟合。在半偏心的径向方向上,平均运动表示适中的内部速度$ \ sim $ 10 km s $^{ - 1} $。该实验表明,远红色中的弱帕申线可以产生可靠的径向速度确定,从而为探索OB-Star运动学的前景比迄今为止可能更多的银河盘。
Massive O and early B stars are important markers of recent star formation and exert a significant influence on their environments during their short lives via photoionization and winds and when they explode as supernovae. In the Milky Way they can be detected at great distances but often lie behind large dust columns, making detection at short wavelengths difficult. In this study the use of the less extinguished far-red spectrum (8400 -- 8800 Å) for radial velocity measurement is examined. Results are reported for a sample of 164 confirmed OB stars within a 2-degree field positioned on the Carina Arm. Most stars are at distances between 3 and 6 kpc, and Westerlund 2 is at the field edge. The measured radial velocities have errors concentrated in the 3--10 km s$^{-1}$ range, with a systematic uncertainty of 2--3 km s$^{-1}$. These are combined with Gaia-mission astrometry to allow full space motions to be constructed. Up to 22 stars are likely to be runaways although 8 of them are as likely to be interloping (so far undetected) binaries. The mean azimuthal motion of the sample fits in with recent measurements of Galactic disk rotation. In the Galactocentric radial direction the mean motion indicates modest infall at a speed of $\sim$ 10 km s$^{-1}$. This experiment shows that weak Paschen lines in the far-red can yield credible radial velocity determination, offering the prospect of exploring OB-star kinematics over much more of the Galactic disk than has hitherto been possible.