Dh. Cohen et al., EVIDENCE FOR WIND ATTENUATION AND A MULTITEMPERATURE PLASMA IN THE COMBINED EUVE AND ROSAT OBSERVATIONS OF EPSILON-CANIS-MAJORIS (B2-II), The Astrophysical journal, 460(1), 1996, pp. 506-521
We use both EUVE and ROSAT data sets to test three general pictures-co
ronal, wind shock, and external-for the production of the observed hig
h-energy emission from the B giant, epsilon CMa (B2 II). Because of th
e very low interstellar opacity along its line of sight, epsilon CMa i
s the only early-type star that has strong emission lines detected wit
h the EUVE spectrometers. The line spectrum provides the first solid o
bservational evidence that the emission is thermal. Theoretical EUV sp
ectra based upon two-temperature model fits to the ROSAT data predict
too much flux, especially in the iron line complex near 175 Angstrom.
We use progressively more complex models until we are able to achieve
a fit to the combined data sets. We find that both a temperature distr
ibution in the emitting plasma and some attenuation of the EUV and sof
t X-ray emission by the ionized stellar wind must be included in the m
odels. The model fitting indicates that only 13% to 21% of the emissio
n-line complex near 175 Angstrom escapes the wind. This amount is cons
istent with the wind shock model, in which the emitting material is di
stributed throughout the stellar wind. It is much more absorption than
is predicted by the external source model, where all of the emitting
material is at radii beyond the cold stellar wind. And it is significa
ntly less absorption than is expected in the coronal model, given what
is known about the star's mass-loss rate. The derived temperature dis
tribution and wind filling factor of hot gas are also qualitatively co
nsistent with our numerical simulations of wind shocks. We conclude th
at although the observed flux from epsilon CMa in the interval 54 eV <
E <100 eV is approximately the same as that above 100 eV, because of w
ind attenuation the total generated radiation in the EUV band between
54 eV and 100 eV is 5 times greater than that in the X-ray region.