Chromospheric active stars: a key program for amateurs

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Christian Buil
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Chromospheric active stars: a key program for amateurs

Post by Christian Buil »


Hello,

J'ouvre ici une discussion sur l'intérêt d'observer l'activité chromosphérique des étoiles similaires au Soleil. Il s'agit de détecter et de suivre en fonction du temps l'émission au coeur des raies du CaII H&K d'étoiles actives (il y en a de très nombreuses !). C'est un très vaste et passionnant sujet en devenir, qui pourra être l'objet de programmes pro-am fructueux...



Hi all,

If the observation of hydrogen halpha line concentrates a lot of attention among amateurs (for good reason), we must not forget that our medium and high resolution spectrographs offer many more opportunities...

The study of Ca II H & K emission that can sometimes be observed in spectra of Sun-like stars is one of those subjects, still neglected by amateurs, whereas it is of great astrophysical importance. The Ca II emission is attached to the activity in the chromosphere of the stars (active center, magnetism cycle, ...)

Discussion with professionals, and also the articles published in scientific journals, show that there is a real demand for observations. The subject is exiting and promising. Sophisticated (eShel) or rudimentary spectrograph (UVEX at this stage), and also Lhires III category instruments can be used (for example):

Image

(note the emission in the core of 61 UMa UV calcium doublet lines)

I have been interested for a few years in this question (my work on the improvement of blue sensitivity of eShel spectrograph...). I write a short article that summarizes the actual situation and the issue:

http://www.astrosurf.com/buil/chromospheric_activity/

Many pro-am collaboration seem possibles. The subject is therefore important for the amateurs of spectrography, besides the fascinating fact that it is possible to observe the activity in the stars atmosphere!

I propose reflexion concerning coordination of these observations (data base, campaign...) and I can try establish professional contacts. I encourage you to observe, contact me and publish on this forum or elsewhere your first results for a better demonstration.

Christian Buil
etienne bertrand
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Re: Chromospheric active stars: a key program for amateurs

Post by etienne bertrand »

Très bonne idée !
Pour le LhiresIII comment peut on calibrer si j'utilise une Atik 314, j'ai une plage de ~100A, les raies H&K rentreront mais je ne vois pas comment les calibrer précisément, quelle lampe utiliser ?
Olivier GARDE
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Re: Chromospheric active stars: a key program for amateurs

Post by Olivier GARDE »

Etienne,

Il y a 2 solutions à ce jour pour la calibration en longueur d'onde vers H et K
- Le faire sur les raies de Balmers, très nombreuses dans cette région du spectre sur des étoiles de type A
- Certaines lampes comme des lampes au Mercure, Xenon ou Krypton peuvent avoir des raies intéressantes dans cette région. Je suis en train d'en tester quelques une.
LHIRES III #5, LISA, e-Shel, C14, RC400 Astrosib, AP1600
http://o.garde.free.fr/astro/Spectro1/Bienvenue.html
Christian Buil
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Re: Chromospheric active stars: a key program for amateurs

Post by Christian Buil »

Etienne, je suis tout à fait d'accord avec ce qu'indique Olivier. Une bonne étoile un peu brillante de type A fourni toutes les raies nécessaires (fin de la série de Balmer) pour réaliser une une focalisation de qualité.

L'usage d'une lampe fluo-compact, avec notamment une raie du mercure à 4047 A peut être une aide aussi, au moins pour ce repérer.

Christian
Peter Somogyi
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Re: Chromospheric active stars: a key program for amateurs

Post by Peter Somogyi »

Nice (and perhaps longterm) program Christian, once there is a public database to see it online which star deserves coverage at the given moment - I'd certainly shoot 1-2 of such targets occasionally (including other target types). I'd also suggest having a reference target to occasionally check and demonstrate, that our practice is stable and data in the database is reliable or how much is the error with various instruments - from a given measurement perspective.

For lower res (R~2000) and to treat focus shifts (common with the LHires at sudden temp changes), I'd highly suggest subtracting the precise continuum (fit for the given target) and do a Gauss fit on the H & K lines (I've made so in past for VV Cep already). That eliminates the dependency on the actual focus and resolution. (Continuum here might need to be added back, in case the formula really requires.)

For calibrations, I use:
- Ar/Ne internal lamp (a bit inaccurate at edges of my ATIK 428 EXm), doing at least 20 sec (before and after exposure). Note that I wrapped the bulb in plastic (other might not work ).
- BLB (Black Light Bulb) type of lamp as flat (plastic diffuser), removing a few emissions in 1D (and applying that correction in 1D, instead a regular flat).

Both internal and external usual Halogen lamp causing severe reflections on the ccd with my LHires III, found BLB much better by practice (and suddely noticed ripples on my ATiK 414 EXm - till that point I thought Halogen was OK). Though, the 414 does not suffer the roughtly 50A sinusoid (low res) ripple, that is an important artifact with the ATIK 428 (probably the ATIK 460 too). Other practice can be, to use a known standard spectrum like Vega, treating continuum with a careful filtration.

A small note, that I use the photometric slit assembly in this region, because the original narrow set is causing severe reflection. In return, I'm forced to use external flat with this slit in the visual...

I also found the 35 micros slit to be more acceptable with the chromatism error (resolution variation) than the 23 micron. I am measuring the R~5000-5500 with 2400/mm grating via the internal cal. lamp, that may represent a lower f-ratio than the incoming beam (f/10 in my case).

This project should be charmful the most for LHires and UVEX owners - once after getting through calibration, and doing some validation effort, before jumping into an endless observation... (for a longterm like this, I guess amateurs are in favour)

Peter
Peter Somogyi
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Re: Chromospheric active stars: a key program for amateurs

Post by Peter Somogyi »

Hello again,

During vacation + 2 clear skies, I've made further experimental progress on this area.
On 04.15, I've been shooting repeats of stars Christian mentioned, attaching as a zip (so everyone can compare). No heliocentric correction made.
One of the interesting repeated star of SNR perspective, but here with the LHires + 35 micron and a 12" scope:
crdra_20190416_009.png
crdra_20190416_009.png (9.26 KiB) Viewed 262258 times
As one can see, H7 and H8 peaks also present. Continuum available reliably only towards 4000A.

On the other hand, aavso has started a project for such of these stars, see:
https://www.aavso.org/spectroscopy-observing-section
"Chromospherically Active Stars"

From yesterday(04.19), two of these targets (none of them easy):
bflyn_20190419_812.png
bflyn_20190419_812.png (9.37 KiB) Viewed 262258 times
In case of BF Lyn, H & K emission cores are well separable (depending on period), coming from the binary components.
rscvn_20190419_899.png
rscvn_20190419_899.png (9.81 KiB) Viewed 262258 times
H7 or other emission also present (requires deblend procedure to measure).

I have started a process getting through a 1st validation at aavso (unsure when to happen - and what else required), so pls take all of these quick results as preliminary / demonstrative.
I was using ref.star from Pickles (order 3 polynom everywhere), using BLB flat in 1D (removing few emissions), doing Ar/Ne lamp. Made no heliocentric correction in these examples.

To measure the H & K (& H7) EWs resolution-independently, found this technique:
A&A 20.11.2018
Application of the spectral subtraction technique to the
Ca ii H & K and Ho lines in a sample of chromospherically
active binaries ?
D. Montes, E. De Castro, M.J. Fern´andez-Figueroa, and M. Cornide

Here are my spectra, allowing direct comparison (SNR or EW changes):
pso_preliminary_20190415_19.zip
(38.75 KiB) Downloaded 667 times
Cheers,
Peter
Benjamin Mauclaire
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Re: Chromospheric active stars: a key program for amateurs

Post by Benjamin Mauclaire »

Hello Peter,

Nice results.

EW is always resolution independant.
Montes's acted that reconstruction and susbtraction methods have similar results for EW measurments.

Just in order to clarify the bib ref you gave.
Montes's paper was published in 1995...
Here is the ads link for interested collegues:
http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1995A%26AS..114..287M

Cheers,

Benji
Spcaudace spectroscopy software: saving you hundred hours of frustration.
Peter Somogyi
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Re: Chromospheric active stars: a key program for amateurs

Post by Peter Somogyi »

Thank you Benji for the reference correction and the look!

You are true, this document is comparing 2 techniques.
However, in 2.3 it is clearly stated that " The spectral subtraction technique provides better results when..." - something that applies for BF Lyn - e.g. multiple lines to deblend require precise continuum, and the widened absorptions (high rotation) require careful treatment.
Moreover, the measurement difference is multiplied when the EWs are bigger (Fig.1) - and to my practice, what I see on that graph, that difference is quite relevant.

Although the EW is resolution independent, the measurement trivially isn't - there are errors that must be analysed and treated, e.g. seriewise correction to fit the lower to the higher resolutions serie, or injecting assumptions about continuum or other accidentally included features - e.g. here: H-epsilon - and test the injected theory.
I suspect such a subtle measurement technique (across many resolutions) will be even star-dependent.

Peter
Andrew Smith
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Re: Chromospheric active stars: a key program for amateurs

Post by Andrew Smith »

EW measurements are only resolution independent in the absence of blending. If a line is fully resolved at one resolution it will not have the same EW at aresolution where it is blended with one or more additional lines..

Regards Andrew
Olivier GARDE
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Re: Chromospheric active stars: a key program for amateurs

Post by Olivier GARDE »

Here is a spectrum of Chi Dra taken with a prototype Echelle spectro with a resolution of R = 30000.

This spectro is in test phase on a RC600 at the observatory of Mars in Ardèche (France)

Image
LHIRES III #5, LISA, e-Shel, C14, RC400 Astrosib, AP1600
http://o.garde.free.fr/astro/Spectro1/Bienvenue.html
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