论文标题
淡淡的面纱槟榔在其昏暗的过程中
A dusty veil shading Betelgeuse during its Great Dimming
论文作者
论文摘要
红色超级巨人是恒星最常见的最终进化阶段,其初始质量是太阳的8到35倍。在此阶段持续大约100,000年的阶段1,红色超级巨头经历了巨大的群众损失。但是,这种质量损失的机制尚不清楚。质量损失可能会影响红色超级巨人的进化路径,崩溃和未来的超新星光曲线,以及其作为中子恒星或黑洞的最终命运。从2019年11月到2020年3月,Betelgeuse是地球上最聪明的红色超级巨人(大约220 parsecs或724 Light年份) - 经历了其可见亮度的历史性昏暗的。通常,其视觉亮度在0.1到1.0之间的明显幅度降低到2020年2月7日至13日左右的1.614 +/- 0.008幅度 - 这一事件称为Betelgeuse的大调身。在这里,我们报告了高角度分辨率的观察结果,表明贝特尔格内斯的南半球在其昏暗的过程中比平常的比平常要比平常深。观测和建模支持一种场景,在该场景中,由于局部温度在光球上出现的凉爽斑块中的局部温度降低,因此最近在恒星附近形成的尘土团块。槟榔的直接成像的亮度变化在数周的时间范围内演变。我们的发现表明,红色超级巨人的质量损失的组成部分是不均匀的,与非常鲜明且快速变化的Photosphere相关
Red supergiants are the most common final evolutionary stage of stars that have initial masses between 8 and 35 times that of the Sun. During this stage, which lasts roughly 100,000 years1, red supergiants experience substantial mass loss. However, the mechanism for this mass loss is unknown. Mass loss may affect the evolutionary path, collapse and future supernova light curve of a red supergiant, and its ultimate fate as either a neutron star or a black hole. From November 2019 to March 2020, Betelgeuse - the second-closest red supergiant to Earth (roughly 220 parsecs, or 724 light years, away) - experienced a historic dimming of its visible brightness. Usually having an apparent magnitude between 0.1 and 1.0, its visual brightness decreased to 1.614 +/- 0.008 magnitudes around 7-13 February 2020 - an event referred to as Betelgeuse's Great Dimming. Here we report high-angular-resolution observations showing that the southern hemisphere of Betelgeuse was ten times darker than usual in the visible spectrum during its Great Dimming. Observations and modelling support a scenario in which a dust clump formed recently in the vicinity of the star, owing to a local temperature decrease in a cool patch that appeared on the photosphere. The directly imaged brightness variations of Betelgeuse evolved on a timescale of weeks. Our findings suggest that a component of mass loss from red supergiants is inhomogeneous, linked to a very contrasted and rapidly changing photosphere