Abstract

We investigate the effects of gravity darkening on the UV continuum polarization produced by an axisymmetric disk that surrounds a rapidly rotating star. Although the model is a single scattering approximation, we do include the effects of attenuation (electron scattering plus hydrogen bound-free absorption) by the disk, using an approach similar to that of Sobolev (1963). Because of the gravity darkening of the star and the attenuation within the disk, the radiation field is not axially symmetric about the radius vector. This implies that the polarization source functions are no longer provided by the finite disk depolarization factors of Cassinelli, Nordsieck, & Murison (1987), which are functions of the intensity moments in a spherically symmetric atmosphere. We reformulate the polarization source functions using generalized intensity moment tensors (J, H(sub i), K(sub ij)) that are valid for an arbitrary radiation field and envelope geometry. We find that the polarization source functions are simplest when using intensity moments in the observer's reference frame. On the other hand, the intensity moments are most easily evaluated in the stellar reference frame. Using the rotation transformation properties of the generalized intensity moments, we relate the observer's moments to those evaluated in the stellar reference frame. Our procedure for determining the polarization source functions thus merely involves choosing a set of Euler angles for the coordinate rotations, and then evaluating the associated rotation matrix. The geometrical complications of polarization transfer are thus reduced to obtaining a coordinate rotation matrix.

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