Tracing a decade of activity towards a yellow hypergiant. The spectral and spatial morphology of IRC+10420 at au scales
Evgenia Koumpia, R. D. Oudmaijer, W.-J. de Wit, A. M\'erand, J. H., Black, and K. M. Ababakr

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution interferometry and spectroscopy to analyze the structure, evolution, and geometry of the yellow hypergiant IRC+10420 over a decade, revealing an hour-glass wind shape and stable spectral type.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed spatially resolved observations of IRC+10420 at au scales and constrains the wind geometry and evolution over seven years.
Findings
Confirmed hour-glass wind geometry with <10° opening angle
Detected no companion at 700-800 au separations
Spectral type and temperature have remained constant since 1994
Abstract
The fate of a massive star during the latest stages of its evolution is highly dependent on its mass-loss history and geometry, with the yellow hypergiants being key objects to study those phases of evolution. We present near-IR interferometric observations of the famous yellow hypergiant IRC +10420 and blue spectra taken between 1994-2019. Our 2.2 m GRAVITY/VLTI observations attain a spatial resolution of 5 stellar radii and probe the hot emission in the K-band tracing the gas via Na i double emission and the Br emission. The observed configurations spatially resolve the 2.2 m continuum as well as the Br and the Na i emission lines. Our geometric modelling demonstrates the presence of a compact neutral zone (Na i) which is slightly larger than the continuum but within an extended Br emitting region. Our geometric models of the Br emission…
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