Optical aperture synthetic images of the photosphere and molecular atmosphere of Mira
Abstract
We have used aperture synthetic imaging methods to obtain diffraction-limited images of the photosphere and molecular atmosphere of the long period variable star Mira (o Ceti). These maps, obtained close to the peak of Mira's variability cycle, clearly indicate substantial distortions from circular symmetry. Our image of the emission due to resonant scattering of TiO shows a significant contribution due to a cool atmosphere with a radius one and a half times as great as that of the photosphere. We suggest that the photospheric asymmetry is most likely associated with the intrinsic pulsation mode of the star and that stable nonradial pulsation modes can coexist with the radial modes that are responsible for the photometric variability. Further aperture synthetic mapping, which should be possible for a major fraction of the photometric cycle, is capable of verifying this hypothesis.
Additional Information
© 1992 American Astronomical Society. Received 7 November 1991; revised 21 January 1992. We are grateful to E. S. Phinney and N. Murray for useful discussions and to H. Spinrad for the loan of the narrowband filters. Vital assistance at the telescope was provided by Juan Carrasco. S.R.K.'s research is funded in part by the Packard Foundation and a NSF Presidential Young Investigator award. C.A.H. was supported by a SERC/NATO research fellowship.Attached Files
Published - 1992AJ____103_1662H.pdf
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Additional details
- Eprint ID
- 74624
- Resolver ID
- CaltechAUTHORS:20170301-070004092
- David and Lucile Packard Foundation
- NSF
- Science and Engineering Research Council (SERC)
- North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO)
- Created
-
2017-03-01Created from EPrint's datestamp field
- Updated
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2021-11-11Created from EPrint's last_modified field
- Caltech groups
- Division of Geological and Planetary Sciences (GPS)