WR 124
WR 124 is a Wolf–Rayet star in the constellation of Sagitta surrounded by a ring nebula of expelled material known as M1-67.[11] It is one of the fastest runaway stars in the Milky Way with a radial velocity around 200 km/s. It was discovered by Paul W. Merrill in 1938, identified as a high-velocity Wolf–Rayet star.[12] In 1982, Anthony Moffat et al. discovered that WR 124 is a variable star.[13] It was given its variable star designation, QR Sagittae, in 1985.[14] It is listed in the General Catalogue of Variable Stars with a brightness range of 0.08 magnitudes.[7]
Distance
[edit | edit source]A 2010 study of WR 124 directly measured the expansion rate of the M1-67 nebula expelled from the star using Hubble Space Telescope camera images taken 11 years apart, and compared that to the expansion velocity measured by the Doppler shift of the nebular emission lines.[10] This yielded a distance of 3.35 kpc, which is less than previous studies, and the resulting luminosity of 150,000 times the Sun (L☉) is much lower than previously calculated. The luminosity is also lower than predicted by models for a star of this spectral class. Previous studies had found distances of 5 kpc[11] to 8.4 kpc,[4] with corresponding luminosities of 338,000–1,000,000 L☉, as expected for a typical WN8h which is a very young star just moving away from the main sequence. The distance to WR 124 calculated from the parallax published in Gaia Data Release 2 is 6,203+1,621
−1,123 pc.[15] Gaia Early Data Release 3 gives a similar parallax, which would suggest a distance 6,400+500
−500 pc.[2]
Physical characteristics
[edit | edit source]With an assumed visual absolute magnitude of −7.22 and 3.1 magnitudes of extinction, WR 124 would be 8.5 kpc away. The temperature of around 40,000 K means that most of its energy is emitted at ultraviolet wavelengths, the bolometric luminosity is 1,000,000 L☉ and the radius is 26 R☉. The mass is calculated from evolutionary models to be 33 M☉.[4]
WR 124 is measured to still be about 15% hydrogen with most of the remaining mass being helium. A young highly massive and luminous WN8h star would still be burning hydrogen in its core, but a less luminous and older star would be burning helium in its core.[17] The result of modelling the star purely from its observed characteristics is a luminosity of 1,000,000 L☉ and a mass of 33 M☉, corresponding to a relatively young hydrogen-burning star at around 8 kpc.[4] In either case, it has only a few hundred thousand years before it explodes as a type Ib or Ic supernova.
The mass loss rate is 10−5 M☉–10−4 M☉ per year, depending on the distance and properties determined for the star.[11]
Nebula
[edit | edit source]WR 124 is surrounded by an intensely hot nebula formed from the star's extreme stellar wind.[11] The nebula M1-67 is expanding at a rate of over 150,000 km/h (93,000 mph) and is nearly 6 light-years across, leading to the dynamical age of 20,000 years. M1-67 has little internal structure, though large clumps of material have been detected, some of which have 30 times the mass of Earth and stretch out up to 150 billion km (93 billion mi). If placed in the Solar System, one of these clumps would span the distance from the Sun to Saturn.
External links
[edit | edit source]References
[edit | edit source]- ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value). Constellation record for this object at VizieR.
- ^ a b c d e f Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value). (Erratum: Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).). Gaia EDR3 record for this source at VizieR.
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