Probing Hypergiant Mass Loss with Adaptive Optics Imaging & Polarimetry in the Infrared: MMT-Pol and LMIRCam observations of IRC +10420 & VY Canis Majoris
We present 2 - 5 micron adaptive optics (AO) imaging and polarimetry of the famous hypergiant stars IRC +10420 and VY Canis Majoris. The imaging polarimetry of IRC +10420 with MMT-Pol at 2.2 micron resolves nebular emission with intrinsic polarization of 30%, with a high surface brightness indicatin...
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Zusammenfassung: | We present 2 - 5 micron adaptive optics (AO) imaging and polarimetry of the
famous hypergiant stars IRC +10420 and VY Canis Majoris. The imaging
polarimetry of IRC +10420 with MMT-Pol at 2.2 micron resolves nebular emission
with intrinsic polarization of 30%, with a high surface brightness indicating
optically thick scattering. The relatively uniform distribution of this
polarized emission both radially and azimuthally around the star confirms
previous studies that place the scattering dust largely in the plane of the
sky. Using constraints on scattered light consistent with the polarimetry at
2.2 micron, extrapolation to wavelengths in the 3 - 5 micron band predicts a
scattered light component significantly below the nebular flux that is observed
in our LBT/LMIRCam 3 - 5 micron AO imaging. Under the assumption this excess
emission is thermal, we find a color temperature of ~ 500 K is required, well
in excess of the emissivity-modified equilibrium temperature for typical
astrophysical dust. The nebular features of VY CMa are found to be highly
polarized (up to 60%) at 1.3 micron, again with optically thick scattering
required to reproduce the observed surface brightness. This star's peculiar
nebular feature dubbed the "Southwest Clump" is clearly detected in the 3.1
micron polarimetry as well, which, unlike IRC+10420, is consistent with
scattered light alone. The high intrinsic polarizations of both hypergiants'
nebulae are compatible with optically thick scattering for typical dust around
evolved dusty stars, where the depolarizing effect of multiple scatters is
mitigated by the grains' low albedos. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.1505.04328 |