DEATHSTAR: Nearby AGB stars with the Atacama Compact Array I. CO envelope sizes and asymmetries: A new hope for accurate mass-loss-rate estimates
S. Ramstedt, W.H.T. Vlemmings, L. Doan, T. Danilovich, M. Lindqvist,, M. Saberi, H. Olofsson, E. De Beck, M.A.T. Groenewegen, S. H\"ofner, J.H., Kastner, F. Kerschbaum, T. Khouri, M. Maercker, R. Montez, G., Quintana-Lacaci, R. Sahai, D. Tafoya, A. Zijlstra

TL;DR
This study maps CO emission around AGB stars using ACA, revealing envelope sizes and asymmetries to improve mass-loss rate estimates and understand stellar wind structures.
Contribution
First to analyze ACA CO emission data for AGB stars, providing new measurements of envelope sizes and asymmetries to refine mass-loss rate calculations.
Findings
CO envelope sizes are larger in C-type than M-type AGB stars.
Most sources show spherical symmetry, with some exhibiting strong asymmetries.
Large scatter in size-density relation suggests complex circumstellar dynamics.
Abstract
This is the first publication of the DEATHSTAR project. The goal of the project is to reduce the uncertainties of observational estimates of mass-loss rates from Asymptotic Giant Branch (AGB) stars. Line emission from 12CO J=2-1 and 3-2 were mapped using the ACA. In this initial analysis, the emission distribution was fit to a Gaussian distribution in the uv-plane. Detailed radiative transfer analysis will be presented in the future. The axes of the best-fit Gaussian at the line center of the 12CO J=2-1 emission gives a first indication of the size of the emitting region. Furthermore, the fitting results, such as the major and minor axis, center position, and the goodness of fit across both lines, constrain the symmetry of the emission distribution. We find that the CO envelope sizes are, in general, larger for C-type than for M-type AGB stars, which is expected if the CO/H2 ratio is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
