ALMA data suggest the presence of a spiral structure in the inner wind of CW Leo
L. Decin, A.M.S. Richards, D. Neufeld, W. Steffen, G. Melnick, R., Lombaert

TL;DR
ALMA observations reveal a spiral structure in the inner wind of CW Leo, likely caused by a binary companion, linking small-scale dust clumps to larger concentric arcs.
Contribution
First ALMA data showing the spiral structure in CW Leo's inner wind and linking it to a binary companion with specific orbital parameters.
Findings
Detection of 25 molecular lines with resolved emission.
Evidence of a spiral structure induced by a binary companion.
Estimated binary orbital period of 55 years and separation of 25 au.
Abstract
(abbreviated) We aim to study the inner wind of the well-known AGB star CW Leo. Different diagnostics probing different geometrical scales have pointed toward a non-homogeneous mass-loss process: dust clumps are observed at milli-arcsec scale, a bipolar structure is seen at arcsecond-scale and multi-concentric shells are detected beyond 1". We present the first ALMA Cycle 0 band 9 data around 650 GHz. The full-resolution data have a spatial resolution of 0".42x0".24, allowing us to study the morpho-kinematical structure within ~6". Results: We have detected 25 molecular lines. The emission of all but one line is spatially resolved. The dust and molecular lines are centered around the continuum peak position. The dust emission has an asymmetric distribution with a central peak flux density of ~2 Jy. The molecular emission lines trace different regions in the wind acceleration region and…
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