VLTI/AMBER spectro-interferometry of the late-type supergiants V766 Cen (=HR 5171 A), sigma Oph, BM Sco, and HD 206859
M. Wittkowski, B. Arroyo-Torres, J. M. Marcaide, F. J. Abellan, A., Chiavassa, J. C. Guirado

TL;DR
This study uses spectro-interferometry to analyze late-type supergiants, revealing their physical properties, circumstellar environments, and evolutionary status, especially focusing on V766 Cen and other similar stars, extending understanding of stellar winds and supergiant characteristics.
Contribution
It provides detailed interferometric observations of high-luminosity supergiants, confirming the relation between molecular layers and luminosity, and clarifies the evolutionary status of V766 Cen as a red supergiant.
Findings
V766 Cen is a high-luminosity red supergiant near the Hayashi and Eddington limits.
Extended molecular layers correlate with increasing luminosity, extending previous findings.
Stars sigma Oph, BM Sco, and HD 206859 are likely high-mass red giants, not supergiants.
Abstract
We add four warmer late-type supergiants to our previous spectro-interferometric studies of red giants and supergiants. V766 Cen (=HR 5171 A) is found to be a high-luminosity log(L/L_sun)=5.8+-0.4 source of Teff 4290+-760 K and radius 1490+-540 Rsun located close to both the Hayashi and Eddington limits; this source is consistent with a 40 Msun evolutionary track without rotation and current mass 27-36 Msun. It exhibits NaI in emission arising from a shell of radius 1.5 Rphot and a photocenter displacement of about 0.1 Rphot. V766 Cen shows strong extended molecular (CO) layers and a dusty circumstellar background component. This suggest an optically thick pseudo-photosphere at about 1.5 Rphot at the onset of the wind. V766 Cen is a red supergiant located close to the Hayashi limit instead of a yellow hypergiant already evolving back toward warmer Teff as previously discussed. The…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
