Detection of high-velocity material from the wind-wind collision zone of Eta Carinae across the 2009.0 periastron passage
Jose H. Groh (MPI for Radioastronomy), Krister E. Nielsen (NASA/GSFC &, CUA), Augusto Damineli (IAG/U Sao Paulo), Theodore R. Gull (NASA/GSFC),, Thomas I. Madura (U Delaware), D. J. Hillier (U Pittsburgh), Mairan Teodoro, (IAG/U Sao Paulo), Thomas Driebe (MPIfR)

TL;DR
This study detects high-velocity, highly ionized gas in Eta Carinae during periastron, attributing it to shock interactions in the wind-wind collision zone, supported by multi-epoch spectroscopic observations and 3D hydrodynamical simulations.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed characterization of high-velocity material in Eta Carinae's wind collision zone during periastron, combining observations with hydrodynamical modeling.
Findings
High-velocity absorption extends up to -2100 km/s in UV lines.
High-velocity absorption lasts for 95-206 days around periastron.
The high-velocity gas is consistent with shock-heated material in the wind collision zone.
Abstract
We report near-IR spectroscopic observations of the Eta Carinae massive binary system during 2008-2009 using VLT/CRIRES. We detect a strong, broad absorption wing in He I 10833 extending up to -1900 km/s across the 2009.0 spectroscopic event. Archival HST/STIS ultraviolet and optical data shows a similar high-velocity absorption (up to -2100 km/s) in the UV resonance lines of Si IV 1394, 1403 across the 2003.5 event. UV lines from low-ionization species, such as Si II 1527, 1533 and C II 1334, 1335, show absorption up to -1200 km/s, indicating that the absorption with v from -1200 to -2100 km/s originates in a region markedly faster and more ionized than the nominal wind of the primary star. Observations obtained at the OPD/LNA during the last 4 spectroscopic cycles (1989-2009) also display high-velocity absorption in He I 10833 during periastron. Based on the OPD/LNA dataset, we…
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