The peculiar fast-rotating star 51 Oph probed by VEGA/CHARA
Narges Jamialahmadi, Philippe Berio, Anthony Meilland, Karine Perraut,, Denis Mourard, Bruno Lopez, Philippe Stee, Nicolas Nardetto, B. Pichon, J.M., Clausse, A. Spang, H. McAlister, T.ten Brummelaar, J. Sturmann, N. Turner, C., Farrington, N. Vargas, N. Scott

TL;DR
This study spatially resolved the photosphere and gaseous environment of the peculiar star 51 Oph, revealing it rotates near its critical velocity and hosts a Keplerian gaseous disk, but its evolutionary status remains uncertain.
Contribution
First direct measurement of 51 Oph's photosphere extension and flattening, confirming near-critical rotation and detailed circumstellar disk geometry.
Findings
Star's photosphere is highly flattened due to rapid rotation.
Circumstellar environment features a Keplerian gaseous disk.
Star exhibits features characteristic of a classical Be star.
Abstract
Stellar rotation is a key in our understanding of both mass-loss and evolution of intermediate and massive stars. It can lead to anisotropic mass-loss in the form of radiative wind or an excretion disk. We wished to spatially resolve the photosphere and gaseous environment of 51 Oph, a peculiar star with a very high vsin(i) of 267km s and an evolutionary status that remains unsettled. It has been classified by different authors as a Herbig, a Pic, or a classical Be star. We used the VEGA visible beam combiner installed on the CHARA array that reaches a submilliarcsecond resolution. Observation were centered on the H emission line. We derived, for the first time, the extension and flattening of 51 Oph photosphere. We found a major axis of =8.080.70 and a minor axis of =5.660.23 . This…
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