The VLT/SPHERE view of the ATOMIUM cool evolved star sample. I. Overview: Sample characterization through polarization analysis
M. Montarg\`es, E. Cannon, A. de Koter, T. Khouri, E. Lagadec, P., Kervella, L. Decin, I. McDonald, W. Homan, L. B. F. M. Waters, R. Sahai, C., A. Gottlieb, J. Malfait, S. Maes, B. Pimpanuwat, M. Jeste, T. Danilovich, F., De Ceuster, M. Van de Sande, D. Gobrecht

TL;DR
This study uses polarimetric imaging and radiative transfer simulations to analyze dust distribution and structure in the circumstellar environments of 14 cool evolved stars, revealing dust formation sites and wind interactions.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed polarization maps of a large sample of evolved stars, linking dust structures with gas observations and modeling dust scattering.
Findings
Polarization primarily probes dust outside the PSF near the plane of the sky.
Maximum degree of linear polarization ranges from 0.03 to 0.38.
Dust formation occurs at specific sites, with limited wind-companion interactions.
Abstract
Aims. Through the ATOMIUM project, based on an ALMA large program, we aim to present a consistent view of a sample of 17 nearby cool evolved stars (Aymptotic Giant Branch and red supergiant stars). Methods. Here we present VLT/SPHERE-ZIMPOL polarimetric maps obtained in the visible of 14 out of the 17 ATOMIUM sources. They were obtained contemporaneously with the ALMA high spatial resolution data. To help interpret the polarized signal, we produced synthetic maps of light scattering by dust, through 3D radiative transfer simulations with the RADMC3D code. Results. The degree of linear polarization (DoLP) observed by ZIMPOL spreads across several optical filters. We infer that it primarily probes dust located just outside of the point spread function, and in or near the plane of the sky, with a total optical depth close to unity in the line of sight, representing only a fraction of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
