Probing Red Supergiant dynamics through photo-center displacements measured by Gaia
A. Chiavassa, R. Kudritzki, B. Davies, B. Freytag, S. E. de Mink

TL;DR
This study uses Gaia data and 3D simulations to analyze how surface convection in red supergiants causes photo-center displacements, affecting parallax measurements and revealing insights into stellar dynamics.
Contribution
It demonstrates that convection-induced surface variability significantly impacts Gaia parallax accuracy for red supergiants, linking observational errors to stellar surface dynamics through advanced simulations.
Findings
Photo-center displacements range from 0.033 to 0.130 AU.
Convection-related surface variability explains a large part of Gaia parallax errors.
Simulations can extract stellar dynamic information from parallax uncertainties.
Abstract
Red supergiant (RSGs) are cool massive stars in a late phase of their evolution when the stellar envelope becomes fully convective. They are the brightest stars in the universe at infrared light and can be detected in galaxies far beyond the Local Group, allowing for accurate determination of chemical composition of galaxies. The study of their physical properties is extremely important for various phenomena including the final fate of massive stars as type II supernovae and gravitational wave progenitors. We explore the well-studied nearby young stellar cluster chi Per. Using Gaia EDR3 data, we find the distance of the cluster (d = 2.260+-0.020 kpc). We then investigate the variability of the convection-related surface structure as a source for parallax measurement uncertainty. We use state-of-the-art 3D radiative hydrodynamics simulations with CO5BOLD and the post-processing radiative…
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