Sun-Sized Water Vapor Masers in Cepheus A
A. M. Sobolev, J. M. Moran, M. D. Gray, A. Alakoz, H. Imai, W. A., Baan, A. M. Tolmachev, V. A. Samodurov, and D. A. Ladeyshchikov

TL;DR
This paper reports the first VLBI observations of a Galactic water maser in Cepheus A using the RadioAstron satellite, revealing the smallest angular structure ever observed in a Galactic maser with extremely high brightness temperatures.
Contribution
It presents the first VLBI detection of a Galactic water maser with space-Earth baselines, achieving unprecedented angular resolution and revealing ultra-compact maser structures.
Findings
Detected two distinct maser components with microarcsecond resolution.
Observed brightness temperatures exceeding 2 x 10^14 K.
Identified the smallest angular structure in a Galactic maser.
Abstract
We present the first VLBI observations of a Galactic water maser (in Chepeus A) made with a very long baseline interferometric array involving the RadioAstron Earth-orbiting satellite station as one of its elements. We detected two distinct components at -16.9 and 0.6 km/s with a fringe spacing of 66 microarcseconds. In total power, the 0.6 km/s component appears to be a single Gaussian component of strength 580 Jy and width of 0.7 km/s. Single-telescope monitoring showed that its lifetime was only 8~months. The absence of a Zeeman pattern implies the longitudinal magnetic field component is weaker than 120 mG. The space-Earth cross power spectrum shows two unresolved components smaller than 15 microarcseconds, corresponding to a linear scale of 1.6 x 10^11 cm, about the diameter of the Sun, for a distance of 700 pc, separated by 0.54 km/s in velocity and by 160 +/-35 microarcseconds in…
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