ALMA-resolved salt emission traces the chemical footprint and inner wind morphology of VY CMa
L. Decin, A.M.S. Richards, T.J. Millar, A. Baudry, E. De Beck, W., Homan, N. Smith, M. Van de Sande, C. Walsh

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution ALMA data to spatially resolve NaCl emission in VY CMa's inner wind, revealing complex morphology, diverse velocities, and insights into dust formation and mass ejection processes.
Contribution
First spatially resolved observations of NaCl in VY CMa's inner wind, revealing detailed morphology and chemical processes influencing dust and gas dynamics.
Findings
NaCl emission shows an axisymmetric pattern with localized density enhancements.
Gaseous NaCl is detected beyond dust condensation zones, indicating incomplete condensation.
NaCl gas is associated with shock-induced sputtering rather than photodesorption.
Abstract
(abreviated) We aim to study the inner-wind structure (R<250 Rstar) of the well-known red supergiant VY CMa. We analyse high spatial resolution (~0".24x0".13) ALMA Science Verification (SV) data in band 7 in which four thermal emission lines of gaseous sodium chloride (NaCl) are present at high signal-to-noise ratio. For the first time, the NaCl emission in the inner wind region of VY CMa is spatially resolved. The ALMA observations reveal the contribution of up to four different spatial regions. The NaCl emission pattern is different compared to the dust continuum and TiO2 emission already analysed from the ALMA SV data. The emission can be reconciled with an axisymmetric geometry, where the lower density polar/rotation axis has a position angle of ~50 degrees measured from north to east. However, this picture can not capture the full morphological diversity, and discrete mass ejection…
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