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Post Info TOPIC: NML Cygni


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RE: NML Cygni
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NML Cygni or NML Cyg is a red supergiant star and the largest star currently known, at about 1,650 times the Sun's diameter. It is one of the extreme luminous giant stars. The distance from it is expected to be around 1.7 kpc. This star has a dusty environment surrounding it. This star exhibits a bean-shaped asymmetric nebula which is coincident with the distribution of its H2O vapor masers. It is a semiregular variable star with a period of around 940 days.
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Title: The Distance and Size of the Red Hypergiant NML Cyg from VLBA and VLA Astrometry
Authors: B. Zhang, M. J. Reid, K. M. Menten, X. W. Zheng, A. Brunthaler

We have measured the annual parallax and proper motion of NML Cyg from multiple epoch VLBA observations of the circulstellar H2O and SiO masers. The measured parallax of NML Cyg is 0.620±0.047 mas, corresponding to a distance of 1.61±0.12 kpc. The measured proper motion of NML Cyg is mu_x = -1.55±0.42 mas/yr eastward and mu_y= -4.59±0.41 mas/yr northward. Both Both the distance and proper motion are consistent with that of Cyg OB2, within their joint uncertainty, confirming their association. Taking into consideration molecular absorption signatures seen toward NML Cyg, we suggest that NML Cyg lies on the far side of the Cyg OB2 association. The stellar luminosity revised with our distance brings NML Cyg significantly below the empirical luminosity limit for a red supergiant. Using the VLA observation the radio photosphere and the SiO maser as a phase reference, we partially resolve the radio photosphere of NML Cyg at 43 GHz and find its diameter is about 44 mas, suggesting an optical stellar diameter of 22 mas, if the size of radio photosphere is 2 times the optical photosphere. Based on the position of circumstellar SiO masers relative to the radio photosphere, we estimate the absolute position of NML Cyg at epoch 2008.868 to be R.A. = 20h46m25.5382s ±0.0010s, Decl. = 40d06'59.379" ±0.015". The peculiar motions of NML Cyg, the average of stars in Cyg OB2, and four other star-forming regions rules out that an expanding "Stroemgren sphere" centred on Cyg OB2 is responsible for the kinematics of the Cygnus X region.

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Title: Imaging the Cool Hypergiant NML Cygni's Dusty Circumstellar Envelope with Adaptive Optics
Authors: M. T. Schuster, M. Marengo, J. L. Hora, G. G. Fazio, R. M. Humphreys, R. D. Gehrz, P. M. Hinz, M. A. Kenworthy, W. F. Hoffmann

We present sub-arcsec angular resolution, high-Strehl ratio mid-IR adaptive optics images of the powerful OH/IR source and cool hypergiant NML Cyg at 8.8, 9.8 and 11.7 um. These images reveal once more the complexity in the dusty envelope surrounding this star. We spatially resolve the physical structures (radius ~0.14", ~240 AU adopting a distance of 1.74 kpc) responsible for NML Cyg's deep 10 um silicate dust absorption feature. We also detect an asymmetric excess, at separations of ~0.3" to 0.5" (~520 to 870 AU), NW from the star. The colours of this excess are consistent with thermal emission of hot, optically thin dust. This excess is oriented in the direction of the Cyg OB2 stellar association, and is likely due to the disruption of NML Cyg's dusty wind with the near-UV radiation flux from the massive hot stars within Cyg OB2. This interaction was predicted in our previous paper (Schuster et al. 2006), to explain the geometry of an inverted photo-dissociation region observed at optical wavelengths.

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