An investigation of the close environment of beta Cep with the VEGA/CHARA interferometer
N. Nardetto, D. Mourard, I. Tallon-Bosc, M. Tallon, P. Berio, E., Chapellier, D. Bonneau, O. Chesneau, P. Mathias, K. Perraut, P. Stee, A., Blazit, J. M. Clausse, O. Delaa, A. Marcotto, F. Millour, A. Roussel, A., Spang, H. McAlister, T. ten Brummelaar, J. Sturmann, L. Sturmann

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution interferometry to characterize the close environment of beta Cep, revealing a circumstellar ring structure and constraining its fundamental parameters for improved stellar modeling.
Contribution
First high-resolution interferometric measurements of beta Cep's environment, detecting a circumstellar ring and providing detailed geometric parameters.
Findings
Detected a large-scale structure of a few mas around beta Cep.
Best model is a co-rotational thin ring with specific diameter and width.
Data compatible with the predicted position of the close companion.
Abstract
High-precision interferometric measurements of pulsating stars help to characterize their close environment. In 1974, a close companion was discovered around the pulsating star beta Cep using the speckle interferometry technique and features at the limit of resolution (20 milli-arcsecond or mas) of the instrument were mentioned that may be due to circumstellar material. Beta Cep has a magnetic field that might be responsible for a spherical shell or ring-like structure around the star as described by the MHD models. Using the visible recombiner VEGA installed on the CHARA long-baseline interferometer at Mt. Wilson, we aim to determine the angular diameter of beta Cep and resolve its close environment with a spatial resolution up to 1 mas level. Medium spectral resolution (R=6000) observations of beta Cep were secured with the VEGA instrument over the years 2008 and 2009. These…
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