The blue supergiant MN18 and its bipolar circumstellar nebula
V.V. Gvaramadze, A.Y. Kniazev, J.M. Bestenlehner, J. Bodensteiner, N., Langer, J. Greiner, E.K. Grebel, L.N. Berdnikov, Y. Beletsky

TL;DR
This paper presents spectrophotometric analysis of the blue supergiant MN18 and its bipolar nebula, revealing its properties, evolutionary status, and comparisons with similar nebulae around other massive stars.
Contribution
It provides detailed characterization of MN18, including temperature, luminosity, and nebula composition, and discusses the nebula's origin and its relation to stellar evolution.
Findings
MN18 is a B1 Ia supergiant with a bipolar nebula.
The nebula shows nitrogen overabundance, indicating processed stellar material.
MN18's properties suggest it is in an evolved stage of massive star evolution.
Abstract
We report the results of spectrophotometric observations of the massive star MN18 revealed via discovery of a bipolar nebula around it with the Spitzer Space Telescope. Using the optical spectrum obtained with the Southern African Large Telescope, we classify this star as B1 Ia. The evolved status of MN18 is supported by the detection of nitrogen overabundance in the nebula, which implies that it is composed of processed material ejected by the star. We analysed the spectrum of MN18 by using the code CMFGEN, obtaining a stellar effective temperature of \approx 21 kK. The star is highly reddened, E(B-V)\approx 2 mag. Adopting an absolute visual magnitude of M_V=-6.8\pm0.5 (typical of B1 supergiants), MN18 has a luminosity of log L/Lsun \approx 5.42\pm0.30, a mass-loss rate of \approx (2.8-4.5)\times10^{-7} Msun/yr, and resides at a distance of \approx 5.6^{+1.5} _{-1.2} kpc. We discuss…
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