The Photospheric Temperatures of Betelgeuse during the Great Dimming of 2019/2020: No New Dust Required
Graham M Harper (1), Edward F Guinan (2) Richard Wasatonic (2), Nils, Ryde (3) ((1) University of Colorado Boulder, (2) Villanova University, (3), Lund University)

TL;DR
The study shows that Betelgeuse's 2019/2020 dimming can be explained by cooling of its photosphere without requiring new dust formation, based on five years of multi-band photometry and modeling.
Contribution
It provides evidence that photospheric cooling, rather than dust, caused Betelgeuse's Great Dimming, supported by multi-band photometry and synthetic spectra modeling.
Findings
Photospheric temperature significantly lower than previously reported.
No new dust needed to explain the dimming.
Cooling likely caused by photospheric motions such as pulsation or convection.
Abstract
The processes that shape the extended atmospheres of red supergiants (RSGs), heat their chromospheres, create molecular reservoirs, drive mass loss, and create dust remain poorly understood. Betelgeuse's V-band "Great Dimming" event of 2019 September /2020 February and its subsequent rapid brightening provides a rare opportunity to study these phenomena. Two different explanations have emerged to explain the dimming; new dust appeared in our line of sight attenuating the photospheric light, or a large portion of the photosphere had cooled. Here we present five years of Wing three-filter (A, B, and C band) TiO and near-IR photometry obtained at the Wasatonic Observatory. These reveal that parts of the photosphere had a mean effective temperature ) significantly lower than that found by (Levesque & Massey 2020). Synthetic photometry from MARCS -model photospheres and spectra…
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