Continuum and molecular emission from the inner regions of the symbiotic system R Aquarii
M. G\'omez-Garrido, V. Bujarrabal, J. Alcolea, A. Castro-Carrizo, J., Miko{\l}ajewska, M. Santander-Garc\'ia

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution ALMA observations to analyze molecular and continuum emissions in the symbiotic system R Aquarii, revealing details about the jet structure, mass transfer, and molecular distributions near the AGB star and white dwarf.
Contribution
First detailed spatial mapping of molecular emissions and continuum in R Aquarii, highlighting the survival of molecules near the AGB star despite intense UV radiation.
Findings
CO and SiO are extended, surviving far from the AGB star.
Less abundant molecules are confined close to the AGB star.
Continuum maps reveal jet structure and possible mass transfer.
Abstract
Symbiotic systems often include an asymptotic giant branch (AGB) star and a hot compact companion, such as a white dwarf, that are in close interaction. Due to the intense ultraviolet emission from the hot companion, the molecular content of circumstellar envelopes in the symbiotic systems is poor. As a result, the less abundant molecules have not been previously studied in detail in this kind of object. R Aqr is the closest and best-studied symbiotic system. We obtain the spatial distribution of the recombination line H30{\alpha} with a high and moderate angular resolution, and it is compared with the emission of the continuum at 1.3 mm. High-resolution maps of several molecules are also obtained in the three observed ALMA bands. We study the molecular emissions using a simplified model to explain the brightness distributions seen in the central position of our maps. We find that the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsProtist diversity and phylogeny
