Evolved star water maser cloud size determined by star size
A. M. S. Richards, S. Etoka, M. D. Gray, E. E. Lekht, J. E., Mendoza-Torres, K. Murakawa, G. Rudnitskij, J.A. Yates

TL;DR
This study used high-resolution imaging of water masers around evolved stars to reveal that maser cloud sizes are proportional to star sizes, with clouds surviving decades and influenced by stellar properties.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed comparison of maser cloud sizes and dynamics across different types of evolved stars, linking cloud properties to star size and stellar convection.
Findings
Maser clouds are 1-2 orders denser than the wind average.
Cloud sizes are proportional to star sizes, matching the stellar radius.
Maser clouds survive for decades and are shaped by stellar convection.
Abstract
Cool, evolved stars undergo copious mass loss but the details of how the matter is returned to the ISM are still under debate. We investigated the structure and evolution of the wind at 5 to 50 stellar radii from Asymptotic Giant Branch and Red Supergiant stars. 22-GHz water masers around seven evolved stars were imaged using MERLIN, at sub-AU resolution. Each source was observed at between 2 and 7 epochs (several stellar periods). We compared our results with long-term Pushchino single dish monitoring. The 22-GHz emission is located in ~spherical, thick, unevenly filled shells. The outflow velocity doubles between the inner and outer shell limits. Water maser clumps could be matched at successive epochs separated by <2 years for AGB stars, or at least 5 years for RSG. This is much shorter than the decades taken for the wind to cross the maser shell, and comparison with spectral…
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