On the influence of the companion star in Eta Carinae: 2D radiative transfer modeling of the ultraviolet and optical spectra
Jose H. Groh (1), D. John Hillier (2), Thomas I. Madura (1), and Gerd, Weigelt (1) ((1) Max-Planck-Institute for Radioastronomy, Germany, (2) Univ., of Pittsburgh, USA)

TL;DR
This study uses 2D radiative transfer modeling to analyze how the wind-wind collision cavity in Eta Carinae affects its ultraviolet and optical spectra, revealing the importance of system orientation and wind interactions.
Contribution
The paper introduces a 2D radiative transfer model that accounts for the wind-wind collision cavity, improving spectral diagnostics of Eta Carinae compared to previous spherical models.
Findings
The wind-wind collision cavity significantly influences spectral line profiles.
The model accurately reproduces the UV spectrum dominated by Fe II absorption.
System orientation parameters are constrained by spectral fitting.
Abstract
We present 2D radiative transfer modeling of the Eta Carinae binary system accounting for the presence of a wind-wind collision (WWC) cavity carved in the optically-thick wind of the primary star. By comparing synthetic line profiles with HST/STIS spectra obtained near apastron, we show that the WWC cavity has a strong influence on multi-wavelength diagnostics. This influence is regulated by the modification of the optical depth in the continuum and spectral lines. We find that H-alpha, H-beta, and Fe II lines are the most affected by the WWC cavity, since they form over a large volume of the primary wind. These spectral lines depend on latitude and azimuth since, according to the orientation of the cavity, different velocity regions of a spectral line are affected. For 2D models with orientation corresponding to orbital inclination angle 110deg < i < 140deg and longitude of periastron…
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