The close circumstellar environment of Betelgeuse - Adaptive optics spectro-imaging in the near-IR with VLT/NACO
Pierre Kervella (LESIA), Tijl Verhoelst, Stephen T. Ridgway (NOAO),, Guy Perrin (LESIA), Sylvestre Lacour (LESIA), Jan Cami, Xavier Haubois, (LESIA)

TL;DR
This study uses adaptive optics spectro-imaging in the near-infrared to reveal complex, asymmetric structures around Betelgeuse, providing insights into its mass loss processes and circumstellar environment.
Contribution
First high-resolution AO images of Betelgeuse's close environment across multiple wavelengths, revealing asymmetries and a plume linked to stellar activity.
Findings
Detected a partly resolved photosphere with asymmetries.
Identified a bright southwestern plume extending six times the stellar radius.
Matched CN absorption features with the stellar photosphere.
Abstract
Context: Betelgeuse is one the largest stars in the sky in terms of angular diameter. Structures on the stellar photosphere have been detected in the visible and near-infrared as well as a compact molecular environment called the MOLsphere. Mid-infrared observations have revealed the nature of some of the molecules in the MOLsphere, some being the precursor of dust. Aims: Betelgeuse is an excellent candidate to understand the process of mass loss in red supergiants. Using diffraction-limited adaptive optics (AO) in the near-infrared, we probe the photosphere and close environment of Betelgeuse to study the wavelength dependence of its extension, and to search for asymmetries. Methods: We obtained AO images with the VLT/NACO instrument, taking advantage of the "cube" mode of the CONICA camera to record separately a large number of short-exposure frames. This allowed us to adopt a "lucky…
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