ALMA detection of CO rotational line emission in red supergiant stars of the massive young star cluster RSGC1 -- Determination of a new mass-loss rate prescription for red supergiants
Leen Decin, Anita M.S. Richards, Pablo Marchant, Hugues Sana

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations of CO emission in RSGC1 cluster stars to derive a new, more accurate mass-loss rate prescription for red supergiants, impacting stellar evolution models and end-stage predictions.
Contribution
It presents a novel mass-loss rate relation for RSGs based on direct gas measurements, reducing uncertainties from dust-based estimates.
Findings
New mass-loss rates are systematically lower than previous dust-based estimates.
The new relation predicts RSG mass loss more accurately for well-studied Galactic RSGs.
Indications of eruptive mass-loss events suggest additional processes beyond the new prescription.
Abstract
[Abridged] Aim: We aim to derive a new mass-loss rate prescription for RSGs that is not afflicted with some uncertainties inherent in preceding studies. Methods: We have observed CO rotational line emission towards a sample of RSGs in the open cluster RSGC1 that all are of similar initial mass. The ALMA CO(2-1) line detections allow to retrieve the gas mass-loss rates (Mdot_CO). In contrast to mass-loss rates derived from the analysis of dust spectral features (Mdot_SED), the data allow a direct determination of the wind velocity and no uncertain dust-to-gas correction factor is needed. Results: Five RSGs in RSGC1 have been detected in CO(2-1). The retrieved Mdot_CO values are systematically lower than Mdot_SED. Although only five RSGs in RSGC1 have been detected, the data allow to propose a new mass-loss rate relation for M-type red supergiants that is dependent on luminosity and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
