Atomium: The astounding complexity of the near circumstellar environment of the M-type AGB star R Hydrae. I. Morpho-kinematical interpretation of CO and SiO emission
Ward Homan, Bannawit Pimpanuwat, Fabrice Herpin, Taissa Danilovich,, Iain McDonald, Sofia H. J.Wallstr\"om, Anita M. S. Richards, Alain Baudry,, Raghvendra Sahai, Tom J. Millar, Alex de Koter, C.A. Gottlieb, Pierre, Kervella, Miguel Montarg\`es, Marie Van de Sande, Leen Decin

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution ALMA observations to reveal complex morpho-kinematical structures in the circumstellar environment of R Hydrae, including bubbles and a possible second companion, shedding light on stellar wind interactions.
Contribution
First detailed high-resolution imaging of R Hydrae's inner wind revealing multi-layered structures and potential binary interactions.
Findings
Identification of elliptical and bubble structures in the wind
Evidence for a second, nearby companion star
Estimated age of bubbles consistent with recent thermal pulse
Abstract
Evolved low- to intermediate-mass stars are known to shed their gaseous envelope into a large, dusty, molecule-rich circumstellar nebula which typically develops a high degree of structural complexity. Most of the large-scale, spatially correlated structures in the nebula are thought to originate from the interaction of the stellar wind with a companion. As part of the Atomium large programme, we observed the M-type asymptotic giant branch (AGB) star R Hydrae with ALMA. The morphology of the inner wind of R Hya, which has a known companion at ~3500 au, was determined from maps of CO and SiO obtained at high angular resolution. A map of the CO emission reveals a multi-layered structure consisting of a large elliptical feature at an angular scale of ~10'' that is oriented along the north-south axis. The wind morphology within the elliptical feature is dominated by two hollow bubbles. The…
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