Sign on

SAO/NASA ADS Astronomy Abstract Service


· Find Similar Abstracts (with default settings below)
· Full Refereed Journal Article (PDF/Postscript)
· Full Refereed Scanned Article (GIF)
· References in the article
· Citations to the Article (110) (Citation History)
· Refereed Citations to the Article
· Reads History
·
· Translate This Page
Title:
Polarization of light scattered from the winds of early-type stars
Authors:
Cassinelli, J. P.; Nordsieck, K. H.; Murison, M. A.
Affiliation:
AA(Wisconsin, University, Madison; Sterrwacht Sonnenborgh, Utrecht, Nletherlands), AB(Wisconsin, University, Madison), AC(Wisconsin, University, Madison)
Publication:
Astrophysical Journal, Part 1 (ISSN 0004-637X), vol. 317, June 1, 1987, p. 290-302. (ApJ Homepage)
Publication Date:
06/1987
Category:
Astrophysics
Origin:
STI
NASA/STI Keywords:
EARLY STARS, LIGHT SCATTERING, POLARIMETRY, POLARIZATION CHARACTERISTICS, RADIATIVE TRANSFER, STELLAR WINDS, BALMER SERIES, ELECTRON DENSITY (CONCENTRATION), H ALPHA LINE, HOT STARS, PLUMES, STELLAR LUMINOSITY
DOI:
10.1086/165277
Bibliographic Code:
1987ApJ...317..290C

Abstract

There is evidence from visible wavelength polarimetry that the matter in the winds of early-type stars is not distributed uniformly about the stars. In this paper equations for the observable polarization from an axisymmetric distribution of electrons are derived first from the basic point source model of Brown and McLean (1977) and then from extended atmosphere radiative transfer theory. A factor is derived which corrects the Brown and McLean model for the finite size of stars. This finite disk factor is found to reduce the magnitude of the predicted polarization to less than half of the point source prediction. The effects of having the mass outflow concentrated in a plume are considered. The effects of absorption in an unocculted plume are shown to give rise to a wavelength-dependent polarization that is described using a 'polarization color' parameter. A continuum opacity index is defined that allows for a straightforward interpretation of the polarization of stars of differing effective temperatures.

Printing Options

Print whole paper
Print Page(s) through

Return 600 dpi PDF to Acrobat/Browser. Different resolutions (200 or 600 dpi), formats (Postscript, PDF, etc), page sizes (US Letter, European A4, etc), and compression (gzip,compress,none) can be set through the Printing Preferences



More Article Retrieval Options

HELP for Article Retrieval


Bibtex entry for this abstract   Preferred format for this abstract (see Preferences)

  New!

Find Similar Abstracts:

Use: Authors
Title
Keywords (in text query field)
Abstract Text
Return: Query Results Return    items starting with number
Query Form
Database: Astronomy
Physics
arXiv e-prints