Abstract

We present a detailed study of the post-outburst phase of McNeil's nebula (V1647 Orionis) using optical B, V, R, I and near-infrared (NIR) J, H, K photometric and low-resolution optical spectroscopic observations. The observations were carried out with the Himalaya Faint Object Spectrograph Camera (HFOSC), NIR camera (NIRCAM), the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research (TIFR) Near-Infrared Camera (TIRCAM) and NICMOS cameras on the 2-m Himalayan Chandra Telescope (HCT) and 1.2-m Physical Research Laboratory (PRL) telescopes during the period 2004 February-2005 December. The optical and NIR observations show a general decline in the brightness of the exciting source of McNeil's nebula (V1647 Ori). Our recent optical images show that V1647 Ori has faded by more than 3 mag since February 2004. McNeil's nebula has also faded considerably. The optical/NIR photometric data also show a significant variation in the magnitudes (ΔV = 0.78, ΔR = 0.44, ΔI = 0.21, ΔJ = 0.24 and ΔH = 0.20 mag) of V1647 Ori within a period of one month, which is possibly undergoing a phase similar to eruptive variables, like EXors or FUors. The optical spectra show a few features such as strong Ha emission with blue-shifted absorption and the Ca II IR triplet (8498, 8542 and 8662 A) in emission. As compared to the period just after outburst, there is a decrease in the depth and extent of the blue-shifted absorption component, indicating a weakening in the powerful stellar wind. The presence of the Ca II IR triplet in emission confirms that V1647 Ori is a pre-main-sequence star. The long-term, post-outburst photometric observations of V1647 Ori suggest an EXor rather than an FUor event. An optical/IR comparison of the region surrounding McNeil's nebula shows that the optical nebula is more widely and predominantly extended to the north, whereas the IR nebula is relatively confined (diameter ∼60 arcsec), but definitely extended, to the south, too. The large colour gradient from north to south and the sudden absence of an optical nebula to the south are suggestive of a large-scale disc-like structure (or envelope) surrounding the central source that hides the southern nebula.

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