Yellow hypergiant V509 Cas -- stable in the 'yellow void'
A. Kasikov, I. Kolka, A. Aret, T. Eenm\"ae, V. Checha

TL;DR
V509 Cas, a yellow hypergiant, has shown remarkable stability in brightness and temperature over recent years, suggesting it may be traversing the 'yellow void' instability region, with circumstellar disc influence evident in spectral line variability.
Contribution
This study provides a detailed multi-year spectroscopic and photometric analysis of V509 Cas, revealing its stability and disc-related spectral features during its evolution.
Findings
Star's brightness remained stable (~0.1 mag variability) over seven years.
Decrease in short-term temperature fluctuation amplitude since early 2000s.
Radial velocity variability consistent with historical data, indicating circumstellar disc influence.
Abstract
The yellow hypergiant star V509 Cas is currently undergoing an extreme phase of evolution. Having experienced eruptive mass-loss outbursts in the 20th century, the star's effective temperature reached record high values in the early 2000s. However, since then, the star's behaviour has displayed an unprecedented level of stability. In spite of that, the star could be traversing through the 'yellow void' instability region. To describe the current evolutionary state of V509 Cas, we analysed its variability using photometric and spectroscopic data collected over recent years. By comparing our findings with historical records, we aim to determine whether the star's surface shows signs of stabilisation. Additionally, we investigate the variability of emission components in the wings of certain spectral lines to highlight the contribution of the circumstellar gaseous disc to this phenomenon.…
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