Non-Periodic Phenomena in Variable Stars
                                                IAU Colloquium, Budapest, 1968


          SPECTRAL EVOLUTION OF THE PECULIAR STAR MHalpha 328-116 
                     (V 1016 CYG) FROM 1965 TO 1967

                        A. MAMMANO, L. ROSINO
             Astrophysical Observatory of Asiago, Italy


                             ABSTRACT

  Some information are given on the spectral evolution of the peculiar 
star MHalpha 328-116 from 1965 to the end of 1967. It is shown that the 
degree of excitation is increasing. Some considerations on the nature of 
the object follow.

  A general study of the spectrum of MHalpha 328-116 in 1965 has been 
published two years ago by the Authors (1966); a second detailed paper 
on the spectrum 1966-67 is in print and will appear very soon (1968). 
Only short informations on the spectral evolution of this interesting 
object will therefore be given here.
  The star was known as a faint emission object (m_pg = 15.5) since 1950, 
when Merrill and Burwell (1950) included it in a list of 519 objects 
with a bright Halpha. The spectrum was estimated near type M. The general 
attention on this star was called, however, only in 1965 after the 
announcement of McCuskey (1965) that the star had risen to magnitude 12 
developing at the same time a very rich emission spectrum. Since then, 
the variable has slowly increased in luminosity of about one magnitude 
in two years.
  The 1965 spectrum of MHalpha 328-116, as observed at Asiago on a 
series of 16 spectrograms with dispersions between 40 and 180 A/mm at 
H_gamma, was characterized by the presence of relatively sharp emission 
lines of H (Balmer series from Halpha to H_18 and some infrared 
components of the Paschen series), FeII, NIII, CIII, CIV and forbidden 
lines of [NII], [OI], [OII], [OIII], [FeII], [FeIII], [SII], [SIII], 
[NeIII], [AIII], etc. The N_1-N_2 nebular lines and the 4363 line of 
[OIII] were particularly strong. The mean radial velocity was found to 
be -65 +- 3 km/s. The spectrum maintained more or less the same 
characteristics during the first months of 1966, but in November 1966 a 
decisive increase of the degree of ionization was apparent. The 
excitation further increased in 1967. Twenty five spectrograms were 
obtained at Asiago with the 122 cm telescope during this period, some of 
them, as that reproduced in Fig. 1, with the Carnegie intensifier 
applied to camera VI of the cassegrain spectrograph (60 A/mm at H_gamma).
  The spectral evolution in 1966-67 was chiefly characterized by a gradual 
increase in the state of ionization, demonstrated by the strengthening 
of the HeI and HeII lines, particularly HeII 4686, and by the emergence 
of new lines of high ionization as OIII, [NeIV], [NeV], [AIV], [AV], 
[FeV], [FeVI] which were not recorded or were faintly visible in the 
spectra of 1965*. The new high ionization lines observed in 1967 are 
reported in Table I.

  * Boyarchuk (1968) claims that the excitation in MHalpha 328-116 was 
decreasing in 1966 (October) as compared with 1965. The Asiago spectrograms 
obtained in 1966 do not support his conclusions. It is true, however, that a 
definite increase of excitation was only observed in the second half of November.
  Another striking point has been the fading of the FeII permitted lines, 
which disappeared or became very weak in 1967, while the forbidden lines 
of [FeII] maintained their intensities or even strengthened. The fading 
of the FeII permitted lines relative to the forbidden ones was also 
observed by Thackeray (1955) in RR Tel. 
                              
                              Table I

New high ionization lines observed in the spectrum 1967 of MHalpha 328-116.

3426	[NeV]	1F	3924 HeII, [FeV]  4.3F	   5060	[FeIII]	     1F
3444	OIII	15	4181 [FeV]	  1F	   5146	[FeVI]	     2F
3715	OIII	14	4230 [FeV]	  1F	   5176	[FeVI]	     2F
3735	[FeV]	3F	4330 NIII        10	   5192	[AIII]	     3F
3757	OIII	2	4511 NIII	  3	   5237	[FeVI]	     1F
3760	OIII	2	4626 [AV]	  2F	   5271	[FeIII]	     1F
3774	OIII	2	4634 NIII	  2	   5309	[CaV]	     1F
3790	OIII	2	4711 [AIV]	  1F	   5677	[FeVI]	     1F
3813	HeII	4	4724 [NeIV]	  1F	   6087	[CaV]	     1F
3820	[FeV]	3F	4740 [AIV]	  1F	   6102	[KIV]	     1F
3839	[FeV]	3F	4754 [FeIII]	  3F	   6435	[AV]	     1F
3892	[FeV]	3F	4769 [FeIII]	  3F	   7006	[AV]	     1F
3896	[FeV]	1F	4778 [FeIII]	  3F				
3911	[FeV]	1F	4972 [FeVI]	  2F				

  Fig. 2 illustrates the most conspicuous changes observed in the spectrum 
1967 of MHalpha 328-116 when compared with the spectra obtained in 
1965. The simultaneous presence in the spectra of lines emitted by atoms 
in very different stages of ionization suggests stratification of the 
emitting ions in an extended envelope, excited by a hot central star. 
The increasing degree of excitation can be attributed partly to the 
increasing temperature of the exciting source and partly to the 
decreasing density of the envelope in slow expansion.
  There still remain many uncertainties on the real physical nature of 
MHalpha 328-116. There are three possibilities: a) that the star is a 
symbiotic object, as suggested by the writers in 1966, and also by 
McCuskey et al. (1966) and by Boyarchuk (1968). Although the light 
curve is not typical of a symbiotic, this hypothesis remains the most 
sound. b) That MHalpha 328-116 is a slow nova, like RR Tel. However, 
the late pre-outburst spectral type, the absence of an absorption 
spectrum near maximum and the appearance of a nebular spectrum while the 
star is still increasing in brightness, are in disagreement with this 
hypothesis. c) Finally, a third possibility is that the object may 
represent an initial stage in the formation of a planetary nebula.
  Further observations in the next years will probably give the 
possibility of making a choice between the various hypotheses.




Fig. 1. The spectrum of MHalpha 328-116. Carnegie Intensifier, Oct. 23, 1967.




Fig. 2. Comparison of spectrum No. 6524 (August 8, 1965) with spectrum No. 7440 
           (Apr. 4, 1967) below. See the strengthening of HeII 4686.

                               
                               
                                REFERENCES

Boyarchuk, A. A., 1968, Astrophysica, 4, 289.
Fitzgerald, M. P., Houk, N. McCuskey, S. 1966, 1966, Astrophys. J. 144, 1135. 
McCuskey, S. W., 1965, Circ. IAU 1916, 1917.
Mammano, A., Rosino, L., 1966, Mem. Soc. astr. ital. XXXVII, 493. 
Mammano, A., Rosino, L., 1968, Mem. Soc. astr. ital., XXXIX, 471. 
Merrill, P. W. and Burwell, C. G. 1950, Astrophys. J. 112, 72. 
Thackeray, A. D. 1955, Mon. Not. R. astr. Soc. 115, 236.

                
                                COMMENT

Fernie: You may be interested to know that we have made some photoelectric 
        observations of this object at Toronto during the summer of 1968. 
        During this time it remained quiescent at about V = 11.06, with 
        fluctuations of no more than about +- 0.03 mag.