Dust and molecular shells in asymptotic giant branch stars - Mid-infrared interferometric observations of R Aql, R Aqr, R Hya, W Hya and V Hya
R. Zhao-Geisler, A. Quirrenbach, R. Koehler, and B. Lopez

TL;DR
This study uses mid-infrared interferometry to analyze dust and molecular shells around various asymptotic giant branch stars, revealing differences in dust shell locations and molecular layers that influence apparent stellar sizes.
Contribution
First detailed interferometric analysis comparing dust and molecular shells in both oxygen-rich and carbon-rich AGB stars, highlighting their spatial distribution and spectral behavior.
Findings
Oxygen-rich stars show a nearly constant FDD diameter between 8-10 microns.
Silicate dust shells are located far from the star, while some are closer at around 8 stellar radii.
V Hya's dust features are explained by AMC and SiC dust presence.
Abstract
Mid-IR (8 - 13 micron) interferometric data of four oxygen-rich AGB stars (R Aql, R Aqr, R Hya, and W Hya) and one carbon-rich AGB star (V Hya) were obtained with MIDI/VLTI between April 2007 and September 2009. The spectrally dispersed visibility data are analyzed by fitting a circular fully limb-darkened disk (FDD). Results. The FDD diameter as function of wavelength is similar for all oxygen-rich stars. The apparent size is almost constant between 8 and 10 micron and gradually increases at wavelengths longer than 10 micron. The apparent FDD diameter in the carbon-rich star V Hya essentially decreases from 8 to 12 micron. The FDD diameters are about 2.2 times larger than the photospheric diameters estimated from K-band observations found in the literature. The silicate dust shells of R Aql, R Hya and W Hya are located fairly far away from the star, while the silicate dust shell of R…
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