Herschel imaging and spectroscopy of the nebula around the luminous blue variable star WRAY 15-751
C. Vamvatira-Nakou, D. Hutsemekers, P. Royer, Y. Naze, P. Magain, K., Exter, C. Waelkens, M. A. T. Groenewegen

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel infrared observations to analyze the nebula around the luminous blue variable WRAY 15-751, revealing multiple shells, their composition, and implications for stellar evolution and mass-loss episodes.
Contribution
First detailed infrared imaging and spectroscopic analysis of WRAY 15-751's nebulae, providing insights into their structure, composition, and the star's evolutionary history.
Findings
Discovered a main dusty shell and a larger, fainter nebula around WRAY 15-751.
Estimated the nebulae's ages, masses, and chemical abundances, indicating episodic mass-loss.
Supported evolutionary models of a ~40 Msun star with minimal rotation.
Abstract
We have obtained far-infrared Herschel PACS imaging and spectroscopic observations of the nebular environment of the luminous blue variable WRAY 15-751. These images clearly show that the main, dusty nebula is a shell of radius 0.5 pc and width 0.35 pc extending outside the H-alpha nebula. They also reveal a second, bigger and fainter dust nebula, observed for the first time. Both nebulae lie in an empty cavity, likely the remnant of the O-star wind bubble formed when the star was on the main sequence. The kinematic ages of the nebulae are about 20000 and 80000 years and each nebula contains about 0.05 Msun of dust. Modeling of the inner nebula indicates a Fe-rich dust. The far-infrared spectrum of the main nebula revealed forbidden emission lines coming from ionized and neutral gas. Our study shows that the main nebula consists of a shell of ionized gas surrounded by a thin…
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