The relationship between gamma Cassiopeiae's X-ray emission and its circumstellar environment
M. A. Smith, R. Lopes de Oliveira, C. Motch, G. W. Henry, N. D., Richardson, K. S. Bjorkman, Ph. Stee, D. Mourard, J. D. Monnier, X. Che, R., Buecke, E. Pollmann, D. R. Gies, G. H. Schaefer, T. ten Brummelaar, H. A., McAlister, N. H. Turner, J. Sturmann, L. Sturmann

TL;DR
This study investigates gamma Cassiopeiae's variable X-ray emission by combining multiwavelength observations, revealing its connection to circumstellar disk activity and providing detailed spectral and orbital insights.
Contribution
It offers a comprehensive multiwavelength analysis of gamma Cas, linking X-ray emission to circumstellar disk properties and refining its orbital and disk parameters.
Findings
X-ray emission correlates with disk brightening and reddening.
The star's decretion disk was found to be axisymmetric with a larger radius.
Two absorption columns are needed, with one increasing significantly during observations.
Abstract
\gamma Cas is the prototypical classical Be star and is best known for its variable hard X-ray emission. To elucidate the reasons for this emission, we mounted a multiwavelength campaign in 2010 centered around 4 XMM observations. The observational techniques included long baseline optical interferometry (LBOI), monitoring by an Automated Photometric Telescope and Halpha observations. Because gamma Cas is also known to be in a binary, we measured Halpha radial velocities and redetermined its period as 203.55+/-0.2 days and an eccentricity near zero. The LBOI observations suggest that the star's decretion disk was axisymmetric in 2010, has an inclination angle near 45^o, and a larger radius than previously reported. The Be star began an "outburst" at the beginning of our campaign, made visible by a disk brightening and reddening during our campaign. Our analyses of the new high…
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