Discovery of a complex linearly polarized spectrum of Betelgeuse dominated by depolarization of the continuum
M. Auri\`ere, A. L\'opez Ariste, P. Mathias, A. L\`ebre, E. Josselin,, M. Montarg\`es, P. Petit, A. Chiavassa, F. Paletou, N. Fabas, R., Konstantinova-Antova, J.-F. Donati, J.H. Grunhut, G.A. Wade, F. Herpin, P., Kervella, G. Perrin, B. Tessore

TL;DR
This study reveals a complex linearly polarized spectrum in Betelgeuse caused mainly by continuum depolarization due to surface brightness spots and atmospheric scattering, offering a new method to map stellar surface features.
Contribution
We discovered a linearly polarized spectrum in Betelgeuse and developed a geometrical model to map surface brightness spots using spectropolarimetric data.
Findings
Detected a strong linear polarization signal in Betelgeuse's spectrum.
Concluded polarization is mainly due to continuum depolarization by absorption lines.
Inferred the presence and positions of two surface brightness spots.
Abstract
Betelgeuse is an M supergiant that harbors spots and giant granules at its surface and presents linear polarization of its continuum. We have previously discovered linear polarization signatures associated with individual lines in the spectra of cool and evolved stars. Here, we investigate whether a similar linearly polarized spectrum exists for Betelgeuse. We used the spectropolarimeter Narval, combining multiple polarimetric sequences to obtain high signal-to-noise ratio spectra of individual lines, as well as the least-squares deconvolution (LSD) approach. We have discovered the existence of a linearly polarized spectrum for Betelgeuse, detecting a rather strong signal (at a few times 10 of the continuum intensity level), both in individual lines and in the LSD profiles. Studying its properties and the signal observed for the resonant \ion{Na}{i}\,D lines, we conclude that we…
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