4.7 Article

Departure from centrosymmetry of red giants and supergiants measured with VLTI/AMBER

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 446, Issue 4, Pages 3277-3284

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stu2382

Keywords

methods: data analysis; techniques: interferometric; stars: atmospheres; stars: fundamental parameters; stars: late-type

Funding

  1. Programme National de Physique Stellaire (PNPS)
  2. Belgian Federal Science Policy Office via the PRODEX Programme of ESA

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We study a sample of 16 bright and well-resolved late-type stars (10 O-rich giants, 2 red supergiants, and 4 C-rich giants) using the ESO VLTI/AMBER facility at medium resolution (R = 1500) in the K band to detect and measure the deviation from centrosymmetry of their resolved surface brightness distribution. As indicator for departure from centrosymmetry, we use the centrosymmetry parameter (CSP). We observe that CSP increases along the asymptotic giant branch, reaching values as large as 30 degrees. These large CSP values are likely attributable to a few large photospheric convective cells. Carbon stars like W Ori and R Scl, being close to the AGB tip, have the second largest CSP values (17.degrees 6 and 22.degrees 3, respectively), being only surpassed by the M5.5Ib/II supergiant T Cet (with CSP of 30.degrees 4). For K and early M giants, CSP values are smaller, never exceeding 10 degrees, with a clear tendency to increase with the atmospheric pressure scaleheight. This supports the hypothesis that the observed deviations from centrosymmetry are somehow related to convective cells, whose size depends upon the atmospheric pressure scaleheight.

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