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P. Cruzalèbes, A. Jorissen, Y. Rabbia, S. Sacuto, A. Chiavassa, E. Pasquato, B. Plez, K. Eriksson, A. Spang, O. Chesneau, Fundamental parameters of 16 late-type stars derived from their angular diameter measured with VLTI/AMBER, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 434, Issue 1, 01 September 2013, Pages 437–450, https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stt1037
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Abstract
Thanks to their large angular dimension and brightness, red giants and supergiants are privileged targets for optical long-baseline interferometers. 16 red giants and supergiants have been observed with the VLTI/AMBER facility over a 2-year period, at medium spectral resolution (|${\scr {R}=1500}$|) in the K band. The limb-darkened angular diameters are derived from fits of stellar atmospheric models on the visibility and the triple product data. The angular diameters do not show any significant temporal variation, except for one target: TX Psc, which shows a variation of 4 per cent using visibility data. For the eight targets previously measured by long-baseline interferometry (LBI) in the same spectral range, the difference between our diameters and the literature values is less than 5 per cent, except for TX Psc, which shows a difference of 11 per cent. For the eight other targets, the present angular diameters are the first measured from LBI. Angular diameters are then used to determine several fundamental stellar parameters, and to locate these targets in the Hertzsprung–Russell diagram (HRD). Except for the enigmatic Tc-poor low-mass carbon star W Ori, the location of Tc-rich stars in the HRD matches remarkably well the thermally-pulsating asymptotic giant branch, as it is predicted by the stellar evolution models. For pulsating stars with periods available, we compute the pulsation constant and locate the stars along the various sequences in the period–luminosity diagram. We confirm the increase in mass along the pulsation sequences, as predicted by theory, except for W Ori which, despite being less massive, appears to have a longer period than T Cet along the first-overtone sequence.
INTRODUCTION
The direct measurement of stellar angular diameters has been the principal goal of most attempts with astronomical interferometers since the pioneering work of Michelson & Pease (1921). For stars of known distance, the angular diameter ϕ, combined with the parallax ϖ, yields the stellar radius |${\mathcal {R}=0.5{\phi }/{\varpi }}$|, where R is in au. When combined with the emergent flux at the stellar surface, linked to the effective temperature Teff, the stellar radius |$\mathcal {R}$| leads to the absolute luminosity |${\mathcal {L}=4\pi \mathcal {R}^2\sigma T_\mathrm{eff}^4}$|, where σ is the Stefan–Boltzmann constant.
These quantities are essential links between the observed properties of stars and the results of theoretical calculations on stellar structures and atmospheres (Baschek, Scholz & Wehrse 1991; Scholz 1997; Dumm & Schild 1998).
Because of their comparatively large dimension, late-type giants and supergiants are suitable targets for modern Michelson interferometers, reaching accuracies better than a few per cent (see e.g. van Belle et al. 1996; Millan-Gabet et al. 2005). With radii larger than 1 au, many nearby giants subtend relatively large angular diameters (>20 mas at 100 pc). They also have high brightnesses in the near-infrared, allowing interferometric measurements with high signal-to-noise ratio (SNR).
Using the ESO/VLTI facility, we initiated in 2009 a long-term programme with the ultimate goal of investigating the presence of surface brightness asymmetries (SBAs), and of their temporal behaviour, following the pioneering work of Ragland et al. (2006). This issue is addressed in a companion paper (Cruzalèbes et al. 2013b). The AMBER instrument is well suited for that purpose, since it provides phase closures at medium spectral resolution in K. This goal prompted us to select our targets all over the red-giant and supergiant regions of the Hertzsprung–Russell diagram (HRD). Investigation of SBAs is important in the framework of the GAIA astrometric satellite (Perryman et al. 2001; Lindegren et al. 2008), since the presence of time-variable SBAs may hinder its ability to derive accurate parallaxes for such stars (see the discussions by Bastian & Hefele 2005; Eriksson & Lindegren 2007; Pasquato, Pourbaix & Jorissen 2011; Chiavassa et al. 2011).
In this paper, we present new determinations of the angular diameters of 16 red giants and supergiants, obtained by combining the fits of limb-darkened disc models using two SPectro-Interferometric (SPI) observables: the visibility amplitude and the triple product. The visibility is defined as the ratio of the modulus of the coherent to the incoherent flux and the triple product as the ratio of the bispectrum to the cubed incoherent flux (see Cruzalèbes et al. 2013a for details). In Section 2, we describe the measurement technique, and the sample of observed sources; in Section 3, we describe the model-fitting procedure; in Section 4, we study the sensitivity of our results with respect to the fundamental parameters of the model: linear radius, effective temperature, surface gravity and microturbulence velocity; in Section 5, we study the possible temporal variability of the angular diameter; in Section 6, we describe the method for deriving the final angular diameter; in Section 7, we confront our results with those of the literature.
Then, our stellar radii are used to infer various fundamental stellar characteristics: (i) location in the HRD, and masses derived from a comparison with evolutionary tracks (Section 8); (ii) luminosity threshold for the occurrence of technetium on the asymptotic giant branch (AGB), since technetium, having no stable isotopes, is a good diagnosis of the s-process of nucleosynthesis (Section 9); and (iii) pulsation mode from the location in the period–luminosity (P–|$\mathcal {L}$|) diagram (Section 10).
The results and graphical outputs presented in the paper were obtained using the modular software suite spidast,1 created to calibrate and interpret SPI measurements, particularly those obtained with VLTI/AMBER (Cruzalèbes, Spang & Sacuto 2008; Cruzalèbes et al. 2010, 2013a).
Throughout the present paper, uncertainties are reported using the concise notation, according to the recommendation of the Joint Committee for Guides in Metrology (JCGM-WG1 2008). The number between parentheses is the numerical value of the standard uncertainty referred to the associated last digits of the quoted result.
INTRODUCING THE OBSERVATIONS
Selecting the science targets for the programme
The sample contains supergiants and long-period variables, bright enough (mK < 2) to be measured by the VLTI subarray [1.80 m auxiliary telescopes (ATs)] with high SNR. In Table 1, we compile their relevant observational parameters, including possible multiplicity and variability. On one hand, the scientific targets must be resolved well enough, which results in visibilities clearly smaller than unity. On the other hand, visibilities higher than ∼0.1 (H band) are necessary to allow the fringe-tracker FINITO2 to work under optimal conditions (Gai et al. 2004). These two contradictory constraints impose the usable range of the spatial frequencies f = B/λ, where B is the baseline length and λ the observation wavelength, to be that associated with the second lobe of the uniform-disc (UD) visibility function. In the following, we use the term resolution criterion to summarize these constraints. They require that the maximum value of the dimensionless parameter z = πϕf, where ϕ is the angular diameter, remains between 3.832, where the first zero of the UD visibility function appears, and 7.016 (second zero). For instance, observations in the K band with AMBER of scientific targets with angular diameters of 10 mas impose to the longest VLTI baseline length to be between 55 and 101 m (first and second zero). The choice of the K band is driven by the presence of the strong CO first-overtone transition around 2.33 μm, allowing to probe different layers in the photosphere within the same filter.
Name . | Spectral type . | ϖHipa . | mKb . | mVc . | AVd . | (V − K)0 . | Componente . | Separatione . | Position anglee . | ΔVe . | Variable typec . | Periodc . | Tcg . | Calibh . |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
. | . | (mas) . | . | . | . | . | . | (arcsec) . | (°) . | . | . | (d) . | . | . |
α Car | F0II8 | 10.6(6) | −1.3(3) | −0.62(5) | 0.07(15) | 0.6(3) | – | – | – | – | – | – | unkn. | η Col |
β Cet | K0III13 | 33.9(2) | −0.3(4) | 1.96–2.11 | 0.03(19) | 2.3(4) | – | – | – | – | SRB17 | 37(4)17 | unkn. | η Cet |
α TrA | K2II14 | 8.4(2) | −1.2(1) | 1.91(5) | 0.08(15) | 3.1(2) | – | – | – | – | – | – | unkn. | ε TrA |
α Hya | K3II–III2 | 18.1(2) | −1.1(2) | 1.93–2.01 | 0.03(14) | 3.1(3) | AB | 283 | 153 | 8 | Susp. | – | unkn. | λ Hya |
AC | 210 | 90 | – | – | – | unkn. | ||||||||
ζ Ara | K3III3 | 6.7(2) | −0.6(2) | 3.12(5) | 0.07(15) | 3.7(3) | – | – | – | – | – | – | unkn. | ε TrA/o Sgr |
δ Oph | M0.5III2 | 19.1(2) | −1.2(2) | 2.72–2.75 | 0.03(15) | 3.9(3) | AB | 66 | 294 | 9 | Susp. | – | unkn. | γ Lib/ε TrA |
γ Hyi | M2III1 | 15.2(1) | −1.0(4) | 3.32–3.38 | 0.04(16) | 4.2(5) | – | – | – | – | SRB | – | unkn. | α Ret |
o1 Ori | M3III5 | 5.0(7) | −0.7(2) | 4.65–4.88 | 0.16(17) | 5.2(2) | AB7 | – | – | 11.7 | SRB | 30(1) | yes6, 11 | HR 2411 |
σ Lib | M3.5III4 | 11.3(3) | −1.4(2) | 3.20–3.46 | 0.03(14) | 4.6(3) | – | – | – | – | SRB | 20(1) | no6, 11 | 51 Hya/ε TrA |
γ Ret | M4III3 | 7.0(1) | −0.5(3) | 4.42–4.64 | 0.08(15) | 4.9(4) | AB | 0.2 | – | – | SR | 25(1) | unkn. | α Ret |
CE Tau | M2Iab-b3 | 1.8(3) | −0.9(2) | 4.23–4.54 | 0.29(19) | 5.0(3) | – | – | – | – | SRC | 165(1) | doubt.6 | ϕ2 Ori |
T Cet | M5.5Ib/II8 | 3.7(5) | −0.8(3) | 4.96–6.9 | 0.08(19) | 6.4(3) | – | – | – | – | SRC | 159.3(1) | prob.6 | ι Eri/γ Scl |
TX Psc | C7,2(N0)(Tc)10 | 3.6(4) | −0.5(3) | 4.79–5.20 | 0.11(10) | 5.4(3) | – | – | – | – | LB | 220(1)9 | yes6, 16 | θ Psc |
W Ori | C5,4(N5)10 | 2.6(10)15 | −0.5(4) | 5.5–6.9 | 0.11(15) | 6.4(5) | – | – | – | – | SRB | 212(1) | no12, 16 | ϕ2 Ori/HR 2113 |
R Scl | C6,5ea(Np)10 | 2.1(15)15 | −0.1(1) | 9.1–12.9 | 0.11(10) | 6.6(2) | ABf | 10 | 234 | 12 | SRB | 370(1) | unkn. | ι Eri |
TW Oph | C5,5(Nb)10 | 3.7(12)15 | 0.5(4) | 11.6–13.8 | 0.10(16) | 7.0(4) | – | – | – | – | SRB | 185(1) | unkn. | o Sgr/γ Lib |
Name . | Spectral type . | ϖHipa . | mKb . | mVc . | AVd . | (V − K)0 . | Componente . | Separatione . | Position anglee . | ΔVe . | Variable typec . | Periodc . | Tcg . | Calibh . |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
. | . | (mas) . | . | . | . | . | . | (arcsec) . | (°) . | . | . | (d) . | . | . |
α Car | F0II8 | 10.6(6) | −1.3(3) | −0.62(5) | 0.07(15) | 0.6(3) | – | – | – | – | – | – | unkn. | η Col |
β Cet | K0III13 | 33.9(2) | −0.3(4) | 1.96–2.11 | 0.03(19) | 2.3(4) | – | – | – | – | SRB17 | 37(4)17 | unkn. | η Cet |
α TrA | K2II14 | 8.4(2) | −1.2(1) | 1.91(5) | 0.08(15) | 3.1(2) | – | – | – | – | – | – | unkn. | ε TrA |
α Hya | K3II–III2 | 18.1(2) | −1.1(2) | 1.93–2.01 | 0.03(14) | 3.1(3) | AB | 283 | 153 | 8 | Susp. | – | unkn. | λ Hya |
AC | 210 | 90 | – | – | – | unkn. | ||||||||
ζ Ara | K3III3 | 6.7(2) | −0.6(2) | 3.12(5) | 0.07(15) | 3.7(3) | – | – | – | – | – | – | unkn. | ε TrA/o Sgr |
δ Oph | M0.5III2 | 19.1(2) | −1.2(2) | 2.72–2.75 | 0.03(15) | 3.9(3) | AB | 66 | 294 | 9 | Susp. | – | unkn. | γ Lib/ε TrA |
γ Hyi | M2III1 | 15.2(1) | −1.0(4) | 3.32–3.38 | 0.04(16) | 4.2(5) | – | – | – | – | SRB | – | unkn. | α Ret |
o1 Ori | M3III5 | 5.0(7) | −0.7(2) | 4.65–4.88 | 0.16(17) | 5.2(2) | AB7 | – | – | 11.7 | SRB | 30(1) | yes6, 11 | HR 2411 |
σ Lib | M3.5III4 | 11.3(3) | −1.4(2) | 3.20–3.46 | 0.03(14) | 4.6(3) | – | – | – | – | SRB | 20(1) | no6, 11 | 51 Hya/ε TrA |
γ Ret | M4III3 | 7.0(1) | −0.5(3) | 4.42–4.64 | 0.08(15) | 4.9(4) | AB | 0.2 | – | – | SR | 25(1) | unkn. | α Ret |
CE Tau | M2Iab-b3 | 1.8(3) | −0.9(2) | 4.23–4.54 | 0.29(19) | 5.0(3) | – | – | – | – | SRC | 165(1) | doubt.6 | ϕ2 Ori |
T Cet | M5.5Ib/II8 | 3.7(5) | −0.8(3) | 4.96–6.9 | 0.08(19) | 6.4(3) | – | – | – | – | SRC | 159.3(1) | prob.6 | ι Eri/γ Scl |
TX Psc | C7,2(N0)(Tc)10 | 3.6(4) | −0.5(3) | 4.79–5.20 | 0.11(10) | 5.4(3) | – | – | – | – | LB | 220(1)9 | yes6, 16 | θ Psc |
W Ori | C5,4(N5)10 | 2.6(10)15 | −0.5(4) | 5.5–6.9 | 0.11(15) | 6.4(5) | – | – | – | – | SRB | 212(1) | no12, 16 | ϕ2 Ori/HR 2113 |
R Scl | C6,5ea(Np)10 | 2.1(15)15 | −0.1(1) | 9.1–12.9 | 0.11(10) | 6.6(2) | ABf | 10 | 234 | 12 | SRB | 370(1) | unkn. | ι Eri |
TW Oph | C5,5(Nb)10 | 3.7(12)15 | 0.5(4) | 11.6–13.8 | 0.10(16) | 7.0(4) | – | – | – | – | SRB | 185(1) | unkn. | o Sgr/γ Lib |
1Landi Dessy & Keenan (1966); 2Morgan & Keenan (1973); 3Houk & Cowley (1975); 4Houk (1978); 5Smith & Lambert (1985); 6Little, Little-Marenin & Bauer (1987); 7Ake & Johnson (1988); 8Houk & Smith-Moore (1988); 9Wasatonic (1997); 10Kholopov et al. (1998); 11Lebzelter & Hron (1999); 12Abia et al. (2001); 13Montes et al. (2001); 14Bordé et al. (2002); 15Knapp et al. (2003); 16Lebzelter & Hron (2003); 17Otero & Moon (2006).
aUnless quoted, from the New HIPPARCOS Astrometric Catalogue (van Leeuwen 2007).
bFrom the 2MASS Catalogue (Skrutskie et al. 2006).
cMagnitude variations, variability type and period of variability taken (unless quoted) from the AAVSO-VSX Database (Watson et al. 2006). ‘Susp.’ stands for suspected variability.
dCalculated, thanks the numerical algorithm of Hakkila et al. (1997), including the studies of Fitzgerald (1968), Neckel & Klare (1980), Berdnikov & Pavlovskaya (1991), Arenou, Grenon & Gomez (1992), Chen et al. (1998) and Drimmel & Spergel (2001), plus a sample of studies of high-galactic-latitude clouds.
eMultiplicity parameters from the WDS Catalogue (Mason et al. 2001).
fThe A component is seen twice by Maercker et al. (2012) with ALMA.
gQualitative information on the technetium content (unkn. stands for ‘unknown’, doubt. for ‘doubtful’ and prob. for ‘probable’).
hAssociated calibrator(s), with the angular diameter given by Cruzalèbes et al. (2013a).
Name . | Spectral type . | ϖHipa . | mKb . | mVc . | AVd . | (V − K)0 . | Componente . | Separatione . | Position anglee . | ΔVe . | Variable typec . | Periodc . | Tcg . | Calibh . |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
. | . | (mas) . | . | . | . | . | . | (arcsec) . | (°) . | . | . | (d) . | . | . |
α Car | F0II8 | 10.6(6) | −1.3(3) | −0.62(5) | 0.07(15) | 0.6(3) | – | – | – | – | – | – | unkn. | η Col |
β Cet | K0III13 | 33.9(2) | −0.3(4) | 1.96–2.11 | 0.03(19) | 2.3(4) | – | – | – | – | SRB17 | 37(4)17 | unkn. | η Cet |
α TrA | K2II14 | 8.4(2) | −1.2(1) | 1.91(5) | 0.08(15) | 3.1(2) | – | – | – | – | – | – | unkn. | ε TrA |
α Hya | K3II–III2 | 18.1(2) | −1.1(2) | 1.93–2.01 | 0.03(14) | 3.1(3) | AB | 283 | 153 | 8 | Susp. | – | unkn. | λ Hya |
AC | 210 | 90 | – | – | – | unkn. | ||||||||
ζ Ara | K3III3 | 6.7(2) | −0.6(2) | 3.12(5) | 0.07(15) | 3.7(3) | – | – | – | – | – | – | unkn. | ε TrA/o Sgr |
δ Oph | M0.5III2 | 19.1(2) | −1.2(2) | 2.72–2.75 | 0.03(15) | 3.9(3) | AB | 66 | 294 | 9 | Susp. | – | unkn. | γ Lib/ε TrA |
γ Hyi | M2III1 | 15.2(1) | −1.0(4) | 3.32–3.38 | 0.04(16) | 4.2(5) | – | – | – | – | SRB | – | unkn. | α Ret |
o1 Ori | M3III5 | 5.0(7) | −0.7(2) | 4.65–4.88 | 0.16(17) | 5.2(2) | AB7 | – | – | 11.7 | SRB | 30(1) | yes6, 11 | HR 2411 |
σ Lib | M3.5III4 | 11.3(3) | −1.4(2) | 3.20–3.46 | 0.03(14) | 4.6(3) | – | – | – | – | SRB | 20(1) | no6, 11 | 51 Hya/ε TrA |
γ Ret | M4III3 | 7.0(1) | −0.5(3) | 4.42–4.64 | 0.08(15) | 4.9(4) | AB | 0.2 | – | – | SR | 25(1) | unkn. | α Ret |
CE Tau | M2Iab-b3 | 1.8(3) | −0.9(2) | 4.23–4.54 | 0.29(19) | 5.0(3) | – | – | – | – | SRC | 165(1) | doubt.6 | ϕ2 Ori |
T Cet | M5.5Ib/II8 | 3.7(5) | −0.8(3) | 4.96–6.9 | 0.08(19) | 6.4(3) | – | – | – | – | SRC | 159.3(1) | prob.6 | ι Eri/γ Scl |
TX Psc | C7,2(N0)(Tc)10 | 3.6(4) | −0.5(3) | 4.79–5.20 | 0.11(10) | 5.4(3) | – | – | – | – | LB | 220(1)9 | yes6, 16 | θ Psc |
W Ori | C5,4(N5)10 | 2.6(10)15 | −0.5(4) | 5.5–6.9 | 0.11(15) | 6.4(5) | – | – | – | – | SRB | 212(1) | no12, 16 | ϕ2 Ori/HR 2113 |
R Scl | C6,5ea(Np)10 | 2.1(15)15 | −0.1(1) | 9.1–12.9 | 0.11(10) | 6.6(2) | ABf | 10 | 234 | 12 | SRB | 370(1) | unkn. | ι Eri |
TW Oph | C5,5(Nb)10 | 3.7(12)15 | 0.5(4) | 11.6–13.8 | 0.10(16) | 7.0(4) | – | – | – | – | SRB | 185(1) | unkn. | o Sgr/γ Lib |
Name . | Spectral type . | ϖHipa . | mKb . | mVc . | AVd . | (V − K)0 . | Componente . | Separatione . | Position anglee . | ΔVe . | Variable typec . | Periodc . | Tcg . | Calibh . |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
. | . | (mas) . | . | . | . | . | . | (arcsec) . | (°) . | . | . | (d) . | . | . |
α Car | F0II8 | 10.6(6) | −1.3(3) | −0.62(5) | 0.07(15) | 0.6(3) | – | – | – | – | – | – | unkn. | η Col |
β Cet | K0III13 | 33.9(2) | −0.3(4) | 1.96–2.11 | 0.03(19) | 2.3(4) | – | – | – | – | SRB17 | 37(4)17 | unkn. | η Cet |
α TrA | K2II14 | 8.4(2) | −1.2(1) | 1.91(5) | 0.08(15) | 3.1(2) | – | – | – | – | – | – | unkn. | ε TrA |
α Hya | K3II–III2 | 18.1(2) | −1.1(2) | 1.93–2.01 | 0.03(14) | 3.1(3) | AB | 283 | 153 | 8 | Susp. | – | unkn. | λ Hya |
AC | 210 | 90 | – | – | – | unkn. | ||||||||
ζ Ara | K3III3 | 6.7(2) | −0.6(2) | 3.12(5) | 0.07(15) | 3.7(3) | – | – | – | – | – | – | unkn. | ε TrA/o Sgr |
δ Oph | M0.5III2 | 19.1(2) | −1.2(2) | 2.72–2.75 | 0.03(15) | 3.9(3) | AB | 66 | 294 | 9 | Susp. | – | unkn. | γ Lib/ε TrA |
γ Hyi | M2III1 | 15.2(1) | −1.0(4) | 3.32–3.38 | 0.04(16) | 4.2(5) | – | – | – | – | SRB | – | unkn. | α Ret |
o1 Ori | M3III5 | 5.0(7) | −0.7(2) | 4.65–4.88 | 0.16(17) | 5.2(2) | AB7 | – | – | 11.7 | SRB | 30(1) | yes6, 11 | HR 2411 |
σ Lib | M3.5III4 | 11.3(3) | −1.4(2) | 3.20–3.46 | 0.03(14) | 4.6(3) | – | – | – | – | SRB | 20(1) | no6, 11 | 51 Hya/ε TrA |
γ Ret | M4III3 | 7.0(1) | −0.5(3) | 4.42–4.64 | 0.08(15) | 4.9(4) | AB | 0.2 | – | – | SR | 25(1) | unkn. | α Ret |
CE Tau | M2Iab-b3 | 1.8(3) | −0.9(2) | 4.23–4.54 | 0.29(19) | 5.0(3) | – | – | – | – | SRC | 165(1) | doubt.6 | ϕ2 Ori |
T Cet | M5.5Ib/II8 | 3.7(5) | −0.8(3) | 4.96–6.9 | 0.08(19) | 6.4(3) | – | – | – | – | SRC | 159.3(1) | prob.6 | ι Eri/γ Scl |
TX Psc | C7,2(N0)(Tc)10 | 3.6(4) | −0.5(3) | 4.79–5.20 | 0.11(10) | 5.4(3) | – | – | – | – | LB | 220(1)9 | yes6, 16 | θ Psc |
W Ori | C5,4(N5)10 | 2.6(10)15 | −0.5(4) | 5.5–6.9 | 0.11(15) | 6.4(5) | – | – | – | – | SRB | 212(1) | no12, 16 | ϕ2 Ori/HR 2113 |
R Scl | C6,5ea(Np)10 | 2.1(15)15 | −0.1(1) | 9.1–12.9 | 0.11(10) | 6.6(2) | ABf | 10 | 234 | 12 | SRB | 370(1) | unkn. | ι Eri |
TW Oph | C5,5(Nb)10 | 3.7(12)15 | 0.5(4) | 11.6–13.8 | 0.10(16) | 7.0(4) | – | – | – | – | SRB | 185(1) | unkn. | o Sgr/γ Lib |
1Landi Dessy & Keenan (1966); 2Morgan & Keenan (1973); 3Houk & Cowley (1975); 4Houk (1978); 5Smith & Lambert (1985); 6Little, Little-Marenin & Bauer (1987); 7Ake & Johnson (1988); 8Houk & Smith-Moore (1988); 9Wasatonic (1997); 10Kholopov et al. (1998); 11Lebzelter & Hron (1999); 12Abia et al. (2001); 13Montes et al. (2001); 14Bordé et al. (2002); 15Knapp et al. (2003); 16Lebzelter & Hron (2003); 17Otero & Moon (2006).
aUnless quoted, from the New HIPPARCOS Astrometric Catalogue (van Leeuwen 2007).
bFrom the 2MASS Catalogue (Skrutskie et al. 2006).
cMagnitude variations, variability type and period of variability taken (unless quoted) from the AAVSO-VSX Database (Watson et al. 2006). ‘Susp.’ stands for suspected variability.
dCalculated, thanks the numerical algorithm of Hakkila et al. (1997), including the studies of Fitzgerald (1968), Neckel & Klare (1980), Berdnikov & Pavlovskaya (1991), Arenou, Grenon & Gomez (1992), Chen et al. (1998) and Drimmel & Spergel (2001), plus a sample of studies of high-galactic-latitude clouds.
eMultiplicity parameters from the WDS Catalogue (Mason et al. 2001).
fThe A component is seen twice by Maercker et al. (2012) with ALMA.
gQualitative information on the technetium content (unkn. stands for ‘unknown’, doubt. for ‘doubtful’ and prob. for ‘probable’).
hAssociated calibrator(s), with the angular diameter given by Cruzalèbes et al. (2013a).
To increase the confidence in the measurements, we record multiple observations of each target per observing night. This observing procedure ensures obtaining sufficient amount of data to compensate for the fringe-tracking deficiency, occurring when the contrast is low or under poor-seeing conditions.
According to our resolution criterion, we select the scientific targets from two catalogues: CHARM2 (Richichi, Percheron & Khristoforova 2005) and CADARS (Pasinetti Fracassini et al. 2001), which compile angular diameter values derived from various methods. In order to observe them with similar instrumental configurations, we choose stars with approximately the same angular diameter (∼10 mas). The suitable calibrators are given in Table 1. Since the angular diameter of some of them is not found in the calibrator catalogues, we had to derive it from the fit of marcs + turbospectrum synthetic spectra on spectrophotometric measurements (Cruzalèbes et al. 2010, 2013a). For reasons of homogeneity, we applied this procedure to all calibrators.
Observation logbook
A sample of 16 cool stars – 10 O-rich giants, two supergiants and four C-rich giants – were observed in 2009 May (three nights), 2009 August (two nights), 2009 November (three nights), 2010 March (three nights) and 2010 December (four nights), using the AMBER instrument at the focus of ESO/VLTI, with three ATs. All observations were done using the medium-resolution-K-band spectral configuration, centred on λ = 2.3 μm, providing about 500 spectral channels with |${\scr {R}=1500}$|. The observation logbook is given in Cruzalèbes et al. (2013b).
DERIVING THE ANGULAR DIAMETERS
The true (calibrated) observables, defined hereafter, are derived from the AMBER output measurements, using the spidast modular software suite we started to develop in 2006 (Cruzalèbes et al. 2008, 2010, 2013a). Recently made available to the community,3spidast performs the following automatized operations: weighting of non-aberrant visibility and triple product data, fine spectral calibration at subpixel level, accurate and robust determination of stellar diameters for calibrator sources, and of their uncertainties as well, correction for the degradations of the interferometer response in visibility and triple product, fitting of parametric chromatic models on SPI observables, and extraction of model parameters.
We measure the angular diameter for each scientific target, by fitting synthetic limb-darkened brightness profiles on the visibility and the triple product. In an attempt to reproduce the behaviour of the true observables, especially in the second lobe of the visibility function, we use the numerical centre-to-limb variation (CLV) profile with respect to the impact parameter, given by the marcs (Gustafsson et al. 2008) + turbospectrum codes (Alvarez & Plez 1998; Plez 2012).
Computing reliable uncertainties
For each observing block (OB), the angular diameter is given by the modified gradient-expansion algorithm (Bevington & Robinson 1992), a robust fitting technique based on the minimization of the weighted χ2, and adapted from Marquardt (1963). As ‘robust’, we mean a final result insensitive to small departures from the model assumptions from which the estimator is optimized (Huber & Ronchetti 2009). We improve the robustness of the results of the fitting process by removing input measurements with low SNR (< 3), as well as values considered as extremal residuals, i.e. showing exceedingly large discrepancies with the model.
Since the data used for the fit are obtained from a complex cross-calibration process, we cannot ensure that the final uncertainties follow a normal distribution, but the χ2 function remains usable as the merit function for finding the best-fitting model parameters. However, the formal output-parameter uncertainties, deduced from the diagonal terms of the covariance matrix of the best-fitting parameters, give irrelevant and usually underestimated values (Press et al. 2007; Enders 2010). In our study, we deduce reliable uncertainties from the boundaries of the 68 per cent confidence interval of the residual-bootstrap distribution of the best-fitting angular diameters (Efron 1979, 1982; Cruzalèbes et al. 2010).
Choosing the model input parameters
Table 2 lists the stellar parameters of the science targets: effective temperature, surface gravity, and mass, of the marcs models used in the regression process, with the microturbulence parameter ξturb = 2 km s−1. We derive these parameters from the two-dimensional B-spline interpolation of the tables of log Teff (de Jager & Nieuwenhuijzen 1987), log g (Allen 2001) and |$\mathcal {L} / \mathcal {L}_{{\odot }}$| (Allen 2001), with respect to the spectral type.
Target(s) . | Teff (K) . | log g . | |$\mathcal {M}/\mathcal {M}_{{\odot }}$| . | [Fe/H] . | [α/Fe] . | C/O . |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
α Car | 7000 | 2.0 | 5.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
β Cet | 4660 | 2.1 | 1.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
α TrA | 4350 | 1.15 | 2.8 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
α Hya | 4300 | 1.3 | 1.1 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
ζ Ara | 4250 | 1.9 | 1.8 | −0.5 | 0.2 | 0.54 |
δ Oph | 3650 | 1.3 | 1.2 | 0.25 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
γ Hyi | 3500 | 1.0 | 1.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
o1 Ori | 3450 | 0.8 | 0.9 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
σ Lib | 3450 | 0.8 | 0.9 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
γ Ret | 3450 | 0.8 | 0.9 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
CE Tau | 3400 | 0.0 | 12.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
T Cet | 3250 | −0.5 | 7.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
TX Psc | 3000 | 0.0 | 2.0 | −0.5 | 0.2 | 1.02 |
R Scl | 2600 | 0.0 | 2.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 1.35 |
W Ori | 2600 | 0.0 | 2.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 1.17 |
TW Oph | 2600 | 0.0 | 2.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 1.17 |
Target(s) . | Teff (K) . | log g . | |$\mathcal {M}/\mathcal {M}_{{\odot }}$| . | [Fe/H] . | [α/Fe] . | C/O . |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
α Car | 7000 | 2.0 | 5.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
β Cet | 4660 | 2.1 | 1.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
α TrA | 4350 | 1.15 | 2.8 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
α Hya | 4300 | 1.3 | 1.1 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
ζ Ara | 4250 | 1.9 | 1.8 | −0.5 | 0.2 | 0.54 |
δ Oph | 3650 | 1.3 | 1.2 | 0.25 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
γ Hyi | 3500 | 1.0 | 1.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
o1 Ori | 3450 | 0.8 | 0.9 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
σ Lib | 3450 | 0.8 | 0.9 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
γ Ret | 3450 | 0.8 | 0.9 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
CE Tau | 3400 | 0.0 | 12.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
T Cet | 3250 | −0.5 | 7.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
TX Psc | 3000 | 0.0 | 2.0 | −0.5 | 0.2 | 1.02 |
R Scl | 2600 | 0.0 | 2.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 1.35 |
W Ori | 2600 | 0.0 | 2.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 1.17 |
TW Oph | 2600 | 0.0 | 2.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 1.17 |
Target(s) . | Teff (K) . | log g . | |$\mathcal {M}/\mathcal {M}_{{\odot }}$| . | [Fe/H] . | [α/Fe] . | C/O . |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
α Car | 7000 | 2.0 | 5.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
β Cet | 4660 | 2.1 | 1.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
α TrA | 4350 | 1.15 | 2.8 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
α Hya | 4300 | 1.3 | 1.1 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
ζ Ara | 4250 | 1.9 | 1.8 | −0.5 | 0.2 | 0.54 |
δ Oph | 3650 | 1.3 | 1.2 | 0.25 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
γ Hyi | 3500 | 1.0 | 1.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
o1 Ori | 3450 | 0.8 | 0.9 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
σ Lib | 3450 | 0.8 | 0.9 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
γ Ret | 3450 | 0.8 | 0.9 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
CE Tau | 3400 | 0.0 | 12.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
T Cet | 3250 | −0.5 | 7.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
TX Psc | 3000 | 0.0 | 2.0 | −0.5 | 0.2 | 1.02 |
R Scl | 2600 | 0.0 | 2.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 1.35 |
W Ori | 2600 | 0.0 | 2.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 1.17 |
TW Oph | 2600 | 0.0 | 2.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 1.17 |
Target(s) . | Teff (K) . | log g . | |$\mathcal {M}/\mathcal {M}_{{\odot }}$| . | [Fe/H] . | [α/Fe] . | C/O . |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
α Car | 7000 | 2.0 | 5.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
β Cet | 4660 | 2.1 | 1.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
α TrA | 4350 | 1.15 | 2.8 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
α Hya | 4300 | 1.3 | 1.1 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
ζ Ara | 4250 | 1.9 | 1.8 | −0.5 | 0.2 | 0.54 |
δ Oph | 3650 | 1.3 | 1.2 | 0.25 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
γ Hyi | 3500 | 1.0 | 1.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
o1 Ori | 3450 | 0.8 | 0.9 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
σ Lib | 3450 | 0.8 | 0.9 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
γ Ret | 3450 | 0.8 | 0.9 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
CE Tau | 3400 | 0.0 | 12.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
T Cet | 3250 | −0.5 | 7.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 0.54 |
TX Psc | 3000 | 0.0 | 2.0 | −0.5 | 0.2 | 1.02 |
R Scl | 2600 | 0.0 | 2.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 1.35 |
W Ori | 2600 | 0.0 | 2.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 1.17 |
TW Oph | 2600 | 0.0 | 2.0 | 0.0 | 0.0 | 1.17 |
Because this method relies on the spectral type, which carries some level of subjectivity, we concede that it is probably not the most accurate method for the determination of fundamental stellar parameters (see also the discussion in relation with Fig. 5 in Section 8). However, this method, currently used to measure the angular diameters of interferometric calibrators (Bordé et al. 2002; Cruzalèbes et al. 2010), provides a homogeneous way to convert various spectral types into fundamental parameters, all over the HRD. In Section 4, we investigate the sensitivity of the angular diameters to the adopted model stellar parameters, and show that this sensitivity is not an issue.
Fitting the model limb-darkened intensity
The spherically symmetric marcs model atmospheres, assuming local thermodynamic and hydrostatic equilibrium, are characterized by the following parameters: effective temperature Teff, surface gravity g, and mass |$\mathcal {M}$|, with |${g = G\mathcal {M}/\mathcal {R}_\mathrm{Ross}^2}$|, where |$\mathcal {R}_\mathrm{Ross}$| is the radius at τRoss = 1. Using the turbospectrum code,4 we compute CLVs of the monochromatic radial intensity Lλ(r) (also called spectral radiance, in W m−2 μm−1 sr−1), where |${r = \mathcal {R}/\mathcal {R}_\mathrm{Ross}}$| is the impact parameter. Fig. 1 shows the CLV profiles, at λ = 2.2 μm, calculated with turbospectrum using a marcs model, with three different sets of input parameters (Table 2), associated with: β Cet (O-rich star, blue triangles); δ Oph (O-rich star, green squares); and TX Psc (C-rich star, red circles).
To be accurately evaluated, the integral on r in equation (1) requires Lλ(r) to be extended all the way to a value of rout corresponding to the lower boundary of the sensitivity of the AMBER instrument. In the K band, this boundary has been measured around 0.5 per cent of the maximum emission (Absil et al. 2010; Duvert et al. 2010). With the marcs models, the lower boundaries of the Rosseland optical depth, used to compute the intensity distributions Lλ(r), are τRoss = 10−6 for O-rich stars, and τRoss = 10−4 for C-rich stars (Fig. 2). Thus, |${\mathcal {R}_\mathrm{out} = \mathcal {R}\left(\tau _{\mathrm{Ross}} = 10^{-6}\right)}$| for O-rich stars, and |${\mathcal {R}_\mathrm{out} = \mathcal {R}\left(\tau _{\mathrm{Ross}} = 10^{-4}\right)}$| for C-rich stars. These bottom levels ensure that the blanketing is correctly taken into account, and that the thermal structure in the line-forming region remains unchanged with respect to atmospheres that would be computed with even smaller optical-depth boundaries. According to Fig. 2, these optical-depth lower boundaries are associated with intensity levels of <10−5 and ∼10−4, respectively, thus far below the instrumental sensitivity, as it should be to work in safe conditions. Moreover, in Section 4, we evaluate the sensitivity of the angular diameter to the marcs model used to compute the CLV.
Fig. 3 shows three typical results of the marcs-CLV fits obtained with the visibility measurements of individual OBs, for β Cet, δ Oph and TX Psc. For the sake of clarity, the true visibility values are shown without error bars. In addition to the fit of the marcs-CLV profile on the true visibilities, we also compute the angular diameter using fits on triple product data (Table 4).
STUDYING THE SENSITIVITY TO MODEL PARAMETERS
The effective temperature, surface gravity and stellar mass adopted for the marcs model representing a given star are derived from the spectral type (Section 3.2). Unfortunately, neither the gravity nor the stellar mass is strongly constrained by the spectral type alone. Therefore, there is a disagreement between the marcs-model parameters and the true stellar values. In this section, we study for the two targets ζ Ara (K giant) and TX Psc (carbon star) the sensitivity of the angular diameter to a change of input parameter values such as Teff, log g and ξturb.
Table 3 shows the sensitivity to the model parameters of the angular diameter, deduced from the fit on visibility data. The top part of the table is for ζ Ara observed at MJD = 549 75.36 and the bottom part is for TX Psc observed at MJD = 551 43.10. The uncertainties in angular diameter are the formal 1σ fitting errors. The choice of the different values of Teff and log g used for this analysis is based on the typical uncertainties, 300 K and 1 dex respectively, the latter coming from the a posteriori determination of the gravity (Section 8 and Fig. 7). The sensitivity to ξturb is studied with the values 2 and 5 km s−1, for the carbon star.
. | Teff (K) . | log g = 1.05 . | log g = 1.9 . |
---|---|---|---|
3950 | $\left\lbrace \begin{array}{@{}l@{\quad }l@{}}\phi = 7.060(2) \\
\chi ^{2} = 2.03 \end{array}\right.$ | $\left\lbrace \begin{array}{@{}l@{\quad }l@{}}\phi = 7.083(2) \\
\chi ^{2} = 1.98 \end{array}\right.$ | |
ζ Ara | |||
4250 | $\left\lbrace \begin{array}{@{}l@{\quad }l@{}}\phi = 7.039(2) \\
\chi ^{2} = 2.01 \end{array}\right.$ | $\left\lbrace \begin{array}{@{}l@{\quad }l@{}}\phi = 7.066(1) \\
\chi ^{2} = 1.83 \end{array}\right.$ | |
Teff (K) | ξturb = 2 km s−1 | ξturb = 5 km s−1 | |
TX Psc | 3000 | $\left\lbrace \begin{array}{@{}l@{\quad }l@{}}\phi = 10.053(2) \\
\chi ^{2} = 21.5 \end{array}\right.$ | $\left\lbrace \begin{array}{@{}l@{\quad }l@{}}\phi = 9.986(2) \\
\chi ^{2} = 22.5 \end{array}\right.$ |
. | Teff (K) . | log g = 1.05 . | log g = 1.9 . |
---|---|---|---|
3950 | $\left\lbrace \begin{array}{@{}l@{\quad }l@{}}\phi = 7.060(2) \\
\chi ^{2} = 2.03 \end{array}\right.$ | $\left\lbrace \begin{array}{@{}l@{\quad }l@{}}\phi = 7.083(2) \\
\chi ^{2} = 1.98 \end{array}\right.$ | |
ζ Ara | |||
4250 | $\left\lbrace \begin{array}{@{}l@{\quad }l@{}}\phi = 7.039(2) \\
\chi ^{2} = 2.01 \end{array}\right.$ | $\left\lbrace \begin{array}{@{}l@{\quad }l@{}}\phi = 7.066(1) \\
\chi ^{2} = 1.83 \end{array}\right.$ | |
Teff (K) | ξturb = 2 km s−1 | ξturb = 5 km s−1 | |
TX Psc | 3000 | $\left\lbrace \begin{array}{@{}l@{\quad }l@{}}\phi = 10.053(2) \\
\chi ^{2} = 21.5 \end{array}\right.$ | $\left\lbrace \begin{array}{@{}l@{\quad }l@{}}\phi = 9.986(2) \\
\chi ^{2} = 22.5 \end{array}\right.$ |
. | Teff (K) . | log g = 1.05 . | log g = 1.9 . |
---|---|---|---|
3950 | $\left\lbrace \begin{array}{@{}l@{\quad }l@{}}\phi = 7.060(2) \\
\chi ^{2} = 2.03 \end{array}\right.$ | $\left\lbrace \begin{array}{@{}l@{\quad }l@{}}\phi = 7.083(2) \\
\chi ^{2} = 1.98 \end{array}\right.$ | |
ζ Ara | |||
4250 | $\left\lbrace \begin{array}{@{}l@{\quad }l@{}}\phi = 7.039(2) \\
\chi ^{2} = 2.01 \end{array}\right.$ | $\left\lbrace \begin{array}{@{}l@{\quad }l@{}}\phi = 7.066(1) \\
\chi ^{2} = 1.83 \end{array}\right.$ | |
Teff (K) | ξturb = 2 km s−1 | ξturb = 5 km s−1 | |
TX Psc | 3000 | $\left\lbrace \begin{array}{@{}l@{\quad }l@{}}\phi = 10.053(2) \\
\chi ^{2} = 21.5 \end{array}\right.$ | $\left\lbrace \begin{array}{@{}l@{\quad }l@{}}\phi = 9.986(2) \\
\chi ^{2} = 22.5 \end{array}\right.$ |
. | Teff (K) . | log g = 1.05 . | log g = 1.9 . |
---|---|---|---|
3950 | $\left\lbrace \begin{array}{@{}l@{\quad }l@{}}\phi = 7.060(2) \\
\chi ^{2} = 2.03 \end{array}\right.$ | $\left\lbrace \begin{array}{@{}l@{\quad }l@{}}\phi = 7.083(2) \\
\chi ^{2} = 1.98 \end{array}\right.$ | |
ζ Ara | |||
4250 | $\left\lbrace \begin{array}{@{}l@{\quad }l@{}}\phi = 7.039(2) \\
\chi ^{2} = 2.01 \end{array}\right.$ | $\left\lbrace \begin{array}{@{}l@{\quad }l@{}}\phi = 7.066(1) \\
\chi ^{2} = 1.83 \end{array}\right.$ | |
Teff (K) | ξturb = 2 km s−1 | ξturb = 5 km s−1 | |
TX Psc | 3000 | $\left\lbrace \begin{array}{@{}l@{\quad }l@{}}\phi = 10.053(2) \\
\chi ^{2} = 21.5 \end{array}\right.$ | $\left\lbrace \begin{array}{@{}l@{\quad }l@{}}\phi = 9.986(2) \\
\chi ^{2} = 22.5 \end{array}\right.$ |
The highest deviations from the nominal values of the angular diameter, i.e. 0.03 mas for ζ Ara and 0.07 mas for TX Psc, are smaller than the final uncertainties, 0.12 and 0.36 mas, respectively (Table 4). Although we cannot infer quantitative general sensitivity rules from only two examples, our results show that such changes as 300 K for Teff, roughly 1 dex for log g and a factor of 2 for ξturb induce variations on the final angular diameter which are smaller than its absolute uncertainty.
Name . | MJD (d) . | ϕV (mas) . | |$\phi _\scr {T}$| (mas) . | ϕfinal (mas) . |
---|---|---|---|---|
α Car | 54 143.26 | 6.78(45) | 6.64(1) | 6.92(11) |
55 269.14 | 6.78(17) | 6.93(2) | ||
β Cet | 55 541.17 | 5.84(40) | 5.45(5) | 5.51(25) |
α TrA | 54 976.23 | 9.23(10) | 9.26(8) | 9.24(2) |
55 052.12 | 8.85(18) | 9.05(5) | ||
55 269.32 | 9.34(2) | 9.34(3) | ||
α Hya | 55 269.23 | 9.37(5) | 9.35(7) | 9.36(6) |
ζ Ara | 54 976.25 | 7.10(5) | 7.09(13) | 7.09(12) |
55 053.18 | 6.86(11) | 6.98(13) | ||
δ Oph | 54 976.22 | 10.05(4) | 9.46(7) | 9.93(9) |
55 051.99 | 10.02(2) | 9.34(2) | ||
55 269.88 | 10.43(21) | 9.47(6) | ||
γ Hyi | 55 539.80 | 8.77(6) | 8.82(12) | 8.79(9) |
o1 Ori | 55 144.24 | 8.93(15) | 10.04(5) | 9.78(10) |
σ Lib | 55 268.81 | 11.73(14) | 11.19(3) | 11.33(10) |
γ Ret | 55 539.83 | 7.44(2) | 7.44(2) | 7.44(2) |
CE Tau | 55 143.28 | 9.94(7) | 10.07(2) | 9.97(8) |
55 541.24 | 9.94(7) | 10.04(12) | ||
T Cet | 55 143.13 | 9.60(11) | 9.70(1) | 9.70(8) |
TX Psc | 55 143.08 | 9.61(21) | 10.04(2) | 10.23(36) |
55 541.07 | 10.60(6) | 10.02(45) | ||
W Ori | 55 143.72 | 9.62(1) | 9.79(7) | 9.63(4) |
R Scl | 55 143.56 | 10.31(5) | 9.88(2) | 10.06(5) |
TW Oph | 54 976.35 | 10.59(38) | 9.53(20) | 9.46(30) |
55 052.19 | 9.19(35) | 9.71(21) |
Name . | MJD (d) . | ϕV (mas) . | |$\phi _\scr {T}$| (mas) . | ϕfinal (mas) . |
---|---|---|---|---|
α Car | 54 143.26 | 6.78(45) | 6.64(1) | 6.92(11) |
55 269.14 | 6.78(17) | 6.93(2) | ||
β Cet | 55 541.17 | 5.84(40) | 5.45(5) | 5.51(25) |
α TrA | 54 976.23 | 9.23(10) | 9.26(8) | 9.24(2) |
55 052.12 | 8.85(18) | 9.05(5) | ||
55 269.32 | 9.34(2) | 9.34(3) | ||
α Hya | 55 269.23 | 9.37(5) | 9.35(7) | 9.36(6) |
ζ Ara | 54 976.25 | 7.10(5) | 7.09(13) | 7.09(12) |
55 053.18 | 6.86(11) | 6.98(13) | ||
δ Oph | 54 976.22 | 10.05(4) | 9.46(7) | 9.93(9) |
55 051.99 | 10.02(2) | 9.34(2) | ||
55 269.88 | 10.43(21) | 9.47(6) | ||
γ Hyi | 55 539.80 | 8.77(6) | 8.82(12) | 8.79(9) |
o1 Ori | 55 144.24 | 8.93(15) | 10.04(5) | 9.78(10) |
σ Lib | 55 268.81 | 11.73(14) | 11.19(3) | 11.33(10) |
γ Ret | 55 539.83 | 7.44(2) | 7.44(2) | 7.44(2) |
CE Tau | 55 143.28 | 9.94(7) | 10.07(2) | 9.97(8) |
55 541.24 | 9.94(7) | 10.04(12) | ||
T Cet | 55 143.13 | 9.60(11) | 9.70(1) | 9.70(8) |
TX Psc | 55 143.08 | 9.61(21) | 10.04(2) | 10.23(36) |
55 541.07 | 10.60(6) | 10.02(45) | ||
W Ori | 55 143.72 | 9.62(1) | 9.79(7) | 9.63(4) |
R Scl | 55 143.56 | 10.31(5) | 9.88(2) | 10.06(5) |
TW Oph | 54 976.35 | 10.59(38) | 9.53(20) | 9.46(30) |
55 052.19 | 9.19(35) | 9.71(21) |
Name . | MJD (d) . | ϕV (mas) . | |$\phi _\scr {T}$| (mas) . | ϕfinal (mas) . |
---|---|---|---|---|
α Car | 54 143.26 | 6.78(45) | 6.64(1) | 6.92(11) |
55 269.14 | 6.78(17) | 6.93(2) | ||
β Cet | 55 541.17 | 5.84(40) | 5.45(5) | 5.51(25) |
α TrA | 54 976.23 | 9.23(10) | 9.26(8) | 9.24(2) |
55 052.12 | 8.85(18) | 9.05(5) | ||
55 269.32 | 9.34(2) | 9.34(3) | ||
α Hya | 55 269.23 | 9.37(5) | 9.35(7) | 9.36(6) |
ζ Ara | 54 976.25 | 7.10(5) | 7.09(13) | 7.09(12) |
55 053.18 | 6.86(11) | 6.98(13) | ||
δ Oph | 54 976.22 | 10.05(4) | 9.46(7) | 9.93(9) |
55 051.99 | 10.02(2) | 9.34(2) | ||
55 269.88 | 10.43(21) | 9.47(6) | ||
γ Hyi | 55 539.80 | 8.77(6) | 8.82(12) | 8.79(9) |
o1 Ori | 55 144.24 | 8.93(15) | 10.04(5) | 9.78(10) |
σ Lib | 55 268.81 | 11.73(14) | 11.19(3) | 11.33(10) |
γ Ret | 55 539.83 | 7.44(2) | 7.44(2) | 7.44(2) |
CE Tau | 55 143.28 | 9.94(7) | 10.07(2) | 9.97(8) |
55 541.24 | 9.94(7) | 10.04(12) | ||
T Cet | 55 143.13 | 9.60(11) | 9.70(1) | 9.70(8) |
TX Psc | 55 143.08 | 9.61(21) | 10.04(2) | 10.23(36) |
55 541.07 | 10.60(6) | 10.02(45) | ||
W Ori | 55 143.72 | 9.62(1) | 9.79(7) | 9.63(4) |
R Scl | 55 143.56 | 10.31(5) | 9.88(2) | 10.06(5) |
TW Oph | 54 976.35 | 10.59(38) | 9.53(20) | 9.46(30) |
55 052.19 | 9.19(35) | 9.71(21) |
Name . | MJD (d) . | ϕV (mas) . | |$\phi _\scr {T}$| (mas) . | ϕfinal (mas) . |
---|---|---|---|---|
α Car | 54 143.26 | 6.78(45) | 6.64(1) | 6.92(11) |
55 269.14 | 6.78(17) | 6.93(2) | ||
β Cet | 55 541.17 | 5.84(40) | 5.45(5) | 5.51(25) |
α TrA | 54 976.23 | 9.23(10) | 9.26(8) | 9.24(2) |
55 052.12 | 8.85(18) | 9.05(5) | ||
55 269.32 | 9.34(2) | 9.34(3) | ||
α Hya | 55 269.23 | 9.37(5) | 9.35(7) | 9.36(6) |
ζ Ara | 54 976.25 | 7.10(5) | 7.09(13) | 7.09(12) |
55 053.18 | 6.86(11) | 6.98(13) | ||
δ Oph | 54 976.22 | 10.05(4) | 9.46(7) | 9.93(9) |
55 051.99 | 10.02(2) | 9.34(2) | ||
55 269.88 | 10.43(21) | 9.47(6) | ||
γ Hyi | 55 539.80 | 8.77(6) | 8.82(12) | 8.79(9) |
o1 Ori | 55 144.24 | 8.93(15) | 10.04(5) | 9.78(10) |
σ Lib | 55 268.81 | 11.73(14) | 11.19(3) | 11.33(10) |
γ Ret | 55 539.83 | 7.44(2) | 7.44(2) | 7.44(2) |
CE Tau | 55 143.28 | 9.94(7) | 10.07(2) | 9.97(8) |
55 541.24 | 9.94(7) | 10.04(12) | ||
T Cet | 55 143.13 | 9.60(11) | 9.70(1) | 9.70(8) |
TX Psc | 55 143.08 | 9.61(21) | 10.04(2) | 10.23(36) |
55 541.07 | 10.60(6) | 10.02(45) | ||
W Ori | 55 143.72 | 9.62(1) | 9.79(7) | 9.63(4) |
R Scl | 55 143.56 | 10.31(5) | 9.88(2) | 10.06(5) |
TW Oph | 54 976.35 | 10.59(38) | 9.53(20) | 9.46(30) |
55 052.19 | 9.19(35) | 9.71(21) |
STUDYING THE TEMPORAL VARIABILITY OF THE ANGULAR DIAMETER
To study the temporal variability of the angular diameter, we group together the observing blocks of the same observing epoch over consecutive days, for each scientific target. Table 4 gives the best-fitting angular diameters of the scientific targets, separately for each observation epoch and for the average over all runs. MJD is the Modified Julian Day for the middle of each observing period. The notations ϕV and |$\phi _\scr {T}$| stand for the weighted means of the angular diameters resulting from fits of the marcs CLVs on visibility and triple product data, respectively.
Fig. 4 shows the temporal behaviour of the best-fitting angular diameter, for our scientific targets observed over different epochs. Except for TX Psc, which shows two different values of ϕV, but not of |$\phi _\scr {T}$|, we find no evidence for temporal variation of the angular diameter for our targets, given the uncertainties. To perform a meaningful study of the angular diameter time variability, a larger amount of data would have been needed for our targets. Unfortunately, we did not succeed in convincing the Observing Programmes Committee to allow supplementary observing time for this purpose.
COMPUTING THE FINAL ANGULAR DIAMETER
Rather than applying a global fit on all data sets (see e.g. Le Bouquin et al. 2008; Domiciano de Souza et al. 2008), which is the commonly used method with VLTI/AMBER data, we propose to combine multiple measurements obtained for a given star under different instrumental and environmental circumstances (see e.g. Ridgway et al. 1980; Richichi et al. 1992; Dyck et al. 1996). Using the visibility and the triple product, we compute the angular diameter averaged over all OBs, with a weighting factor derived from the uncertainty on the angular diameter, the quality of the fit and the seeing conditions during each OB. Then, we combine the two angular diameter values, which leads to a unique final value (last column of Table 4). We note that δ Oph is the only star for which ϕV and |$\phi _\scr {T}$| are significantly different (up to 10 per cent, as seen in Table 4 and Fig. 4), although we have no explanation for that discrepancy.
CONFRONTING OUR RESULTS WITH THOSE OF THE LITERATURE
Here, we compare our final angular diameter values with those derived from measurements obtained by other instruments or methods. Table 5 gathers the values published in the literature, related to limb-darkened models, derived from indirect methods: lunar occultation (LO) and long-baseline interferometry (LBI). These values are obtained in various spectral ranges and related to various photospheric models. Their large dispersions make them difficult to use in a direct comparison with our results, which are repeated in the ϕLBI column under Reference (48). Therefore, we believe that the only meaningful comparison is between our values and those from the literature obtained with LBI in the same spectral domain (K band), as done in the last column of Table 5.
Apart for TX Psc, only small differences are found between our new values and the published LBI values for the seven science targets α Car, β Cet, α Hya, δ Oph, CE Tau, W Ori and R Scl. Such a good agreement supports the validity and the reliability of our method, which gives, in addition, reliable uncertainties. Our study provides the first LBI determinations of the angular diameter for eight other targets: α TrA, ζ Ara, γ Hyi, o1 Ori, σ Lib, γ Ret, T Cet and TW Oph.
Coming back to TX Psc, this star has often been observed in the past using high-resolution techniques, giving an angular diameter slightly larger than our new measurement. Given the error bars, our value is in good agreement with the value from Barnes, Evans & Moffett (1978), derived from the visual surface brightness method. Richichi et al. (1995) attribute to the temporal variability of ϕ already noted previously for TX Psc (an Lb-type variable) most of the disagreement between their LO measurement and the LBI values of Quirrenbach et al. (1994), obtained in the red part of the visible spectral domain with the MkIII Optical Interferometer, and of Dyck, van Belle & Benson (1996), obtained at 2.2 μm with the IOTA interferometer. From repeated measurements, Quirrenbach et al. suggested a substantial variation of the angular diameter, correlated with the visual magnitude, varying from 4.8 to 5.2 in 220 days (Watson, Henden & Price 2006). As shown in Section 5, our data tend to confirm this variation.
HERTZSPRUNG–RUSSELL DIAGRAM
In this section, we use the values of the angular diameters of our calibrators and science targets to infer their location in the HRD (Teff–|$\mathcal {L}$|).
The luminosity |$\mathcal {L}$| is defined, in the marcs models, from the relation |${\mathcal {L} = 4 \pi \mathcal {R}_\mathrm{Ross}^2 F\left(\mathcal {R}_\mathrm{Ross}\right)}$|, where |$F\left(\mathcal {R}_\mathrm{Ross}\right)$| is the flux per unit surface emitted by the layer located at the Rosseland radius (Gustafsson et al. 2008). The effective temperature Teff is then defined according to |${F\left(\mathcal {R}_\mathrm{Ross}\right) = \sigma T_\mathrm{eff}^4}$|.
Table 6 gives the final fundamental parameters of our science targets and calibrators. The uncertainty-propagation formulae given by Winzer (2000), based on the second-order Taylor approximation, are used to compute the uncertainties on the derived fundamental parameters. For input uncertainties larger than 30 per cent, we use the confidence interval transformation principle (see e.g. Smithson 2002; Kelley 2007).
To ensure consistency with the fitting process, which uses as model input parameters those derived from the spectral type (Cruzalèbes et al. 2013a and Table 2), the value adopted for the effective temperature of the star is the value listed in Table 2.
Fig. 6 shows the resulting Teff–|$\mathcal {L}_\mathrm{obs}$| diagram, including the calibrators and the science targets. In order to distinguish between the error bars, the data points for R Scl, W Ori and TW Oph are slightly shifted horizontally, although these three carbon stars have the same effective temperature 2600 K. This HRD displays as well evolutionary tracks from the Padova set (Bertelli et al. 2008, 2009), for Y = 0.26 and Z = 0.017, and for masses between 1 and 8 |$\mathcal {M}_{{\odot }}$|, where Y is the helium abundance and Z the metallicity.
With the linear radius derived from the interferometry, and the luminosity following the relationship |${\mathcal {L} = 4\pi \mathcal {R}^2\sigma T_\mathrm{eff}^4}$|, the location of our targets in the HRD allows us to perform interesting checks of stellar structure related to the presence or absence of technetium, and to the period–luminosity relationship.
TECHNETIUM
Technetium is an s-process element with no stable isotope and was first identified in the spectra of some M and S stars by Merrill (1952). With a laboratory half-life of 2.13 × 105 yr, the technetium isotope 99Tc is the only one produced by the s-process in thermally-pulsating AGB (TP-AGB) stars (see Goriely & Mowlavi 2000). Due to the existence of an isomeric state of the 99Tc nucleus, the high temperatures encountered during thermal pulses strongly shorten the effective half-life of 99Tc (t1/2 ∼ 1 yr at ∼3 × 108 K) (Cosner, Despain & Truran 1984), but the large neutron densities delivered by the 22Ne(α,n)25Mg neutron source, operating at these high temperatures, more than compensate for the reduction of the 99Tc lifetime (Mathews et al. 1986), and enable a substantial technetium production. The dredge-up episodes then carry technetium to the envelope, where it decays steadily at its terrestrial rate of t1/2 = 2.13 × 105 yr. Starting from an abundance associated with the maximum observed in Tc-rich AGB stars, technetium should remain detectable during 1.0 × 106–1.5 × 106 yr (Smith & Lambert 1988). If the dredge-up of heavy elements occurs after each thermal pulse, occurring every 0.1 × 106–0.3 × 106 yr, virtually all s-process-enriched TP-AGB stars should exhibit technetium lines.
This conclusion applies to the situation where the s-process is powered by the 22Ne(α,n)25Mg neutron source operating in the thermal pulse itself. However, Straniero et al. (1995) advocated that the s-process nucleosynthesis mainly occurs during the interpulse with neutrons from 13C(α,n)16O (see Käppeler et al. 2011, for a recent review). When this process occurs in low-mass stars, and technetium is engulfed in the subsequent thermal pulse, it should not decay at a fast rate, because the arguments put forward by Cosner et al. (1984) and Mathews et al. (1986), and discussed above, only apply to intermediate-mass stars with hot thermal pulses.
One thus reaches the conclusion that s-process-enriched TP-AGB stars, of both low and intermediate mass, should necessarily exhibit technetium, unless the time span between successive dredge-ups becomes comparable to the Tc lifetime in the envelope. Indeed, all the S stars identified as TP-AGB stars by Van Eck et al. (1998), thanks to the Hipparcos parallaxes, turned out to be Tc rich, and a survey of technetium in the large Henize sample of S stars did not challenge that conclusion either (Van Eck & Jorissen 1999, 2000).
The present sample allows us to check whether a similar conclusion holds true for a sample comprising oxygen-rich giants and supergiants, as well as carbon stars. The technetium content of our science targets has been collected from the literature (last column of Table 1), and displayed in graphical form in Fig. 8 where it is confronted to the TP-AGB tracks (dashed lines) for different stellar masses. The presence or absence of Tc conforms to the expectations that namely TP-AGB stars exhibit Tc, except for the carbon star W Ori, where Tc has been tagged as absent by two independent studies, despite the fact that this star lies well within the TP-AGB region, as it should for a cool carbon star anyway. The s-process content of that star has been studied by Abia et al. (2002) who find only moderate s-process enhancements, if any (≤0.3 dex), and this fact alone may explain the absence of detectable Tc. With the stellar parameters now available from our interferometric study for two more carbon stars (R Scl and TW Oph) falling in that region of the HRD, it will be of interest to perform a similar analysis on these two stars to get constraints on their nucleosynthesis processes.
Name . | ϕind . | Reference . | ϕLO . | Reference . | ϕLBI . | Reference . | Difference . |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
α Car | 5.9(4) | 16 | 6.6(8) | 5 | |||
6.0(7) | 3 | 6.86(41) | 2 | ||||
6.5(8) | 11 | 6.92(11) | 48 | −0.1% | |||
6.8(4) | 13 | 6.93(15) | 42 | ||||
7.1(2) | 9 | ||||||
7.22(42) | 37 | ||||||
6.7 | 6.9 | ||||||
β Cet | 5.03(40) | 19 | 5.29(8) | 46 | |||
5.31(6) | 35 | 5.329(5) | 44 | ||||
5.4(8) | 16 | 5.51(25) | 48 | +3.4% | |||
5.66(39) | 45 | ||||||
6.5 | 24 | ||||||
7.4(9) | 3 | ||||||
8.0 | 20 | ||||||
5.6 | 5.3 | ||||||
α TrA | 11.6(17) | 16 | 9.24(2) | 48 | |||
8.98(10) | 35 | ||||||
9.81(39) | 40 | ||||||
15.0(18) | 3 | ||||||
9.5 | |||||||
α Hya | 9.30(39) | 9 | 9.73(10) | 38 | |||
9.4(9) | 23 | 9.335(16) | 44 | ||||
9.9(10) | 13 | 9.36(6) | 48 | +0.3% | |||
10.0(15) | 16 | ||||||
14.0(17) | 3 | ||||||
10.0 | 9.4 | ||||||
ζ Ara | 7.21(21) | 39 | 7.09(12) | 48 | |||
7.2 | 20 | ||||||
7.6(11) | 16 | ||||||
7.62(53) | 45 | ||||||
9.0 | 24 | ||||||
11.0(13) | 3 | ||||||
7.6 | |||||||
δ Oph | 10(1) | 21 | 9.50(50) | 30 | |||
10.03(10) | 35 | 9.93(9) | 48 | +2.1% | |||
10.18(20) | 25 | 9.946(13) | 44 | ||||
10.22(71) | 45 | 10.47(12) | 38 | ||||
10.23(31) | 40 | ||||||
11.6(17) | 16 | ||||||
11.0 | 24 | ||||||
13 | 1 | ||||||
13.0(16) | 3 | ||||||
26(7) | 8 | ||||||
10.4 | 10.0 | ||||||
γ Hyi | 9.5 | 33 | 8.79(9) | 48 | |||
9.8(15) | 16 | ||||||
10.0(12) | 3 | ||||||
9.7 | |||||||
o1 Ori | 7.1(21) | 3 | 9.78(10) | 48 | |||
σ Lib | 11.0(13) | 3 | 11.33(10) | 48 | |||
12.05(83) | 45 | ||||||
12.5 | 20 | ||||||
13.0 | 24 | ||||||
12.1 | |||||||
γ Ret | 7.5(2) | 32 | 7.44(2) | 48 | |||
8.0 | 33 | ||||||
11.0(33) | 16 | ||||||
7.8 | |||||||
CE Tau | 9.4(11) | 3 | 9.1(8) | 15 | 9.3(5) | 34 | |
13 | 1 | 10.9(10) | 14 | 9.83(7) | 30 | ||
13.0(20) | 16 | 17(1) | 18 | 9.97(8) | 48 | +3.7% | |
10.68(21) | 27 | ||||||
11.5 | 12.1 | 10.0 | |||||
T Cet | 13.1(39) | 16 | 9.70(8) | 48 | |||
14.5 | 43 | ||||||
14.1 | |||||||
TX Psc | 6.2 | 12 | 8.40(5) | 29 | 10.23(36) | 48 | −10.6% |
9.5(5) | 11 | 8.9(10) | 4 | 11.2(10) | 28 | ||
9.31(75) | 10 | 11.44(30) | 31 | ||||
10(3) | 6 | ||||||
10.2(25) | 7 | ||||||
8.0 | 8.5 | 10.9 | |||||
W Ori | 9.63(4) | 48 | −2.8% | ||||
9.91(60) | 31 | ||||||
9.7 | |||||||
R Scl | 12.2 | 22 | 10.06(5) | 48 | −1.4% | ||
12.0 | 26 | 10.2(5) | 47 | ||||
12.1 | 41 | ||||||
12.75(98) | 36 | ||||||
12.3 | 10.1 | ||||||
TW Oph | 10.4(5) | 17 | 9.46(30) | 48 |
Name . | ϕind . | Reference . | ϕLO . | Reference . | ϕLBI . | Reference . | Difference . |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
α Car | 5.9(4) | 16 | 6.6(8) | 5 | |||
6.0(7) | 3 | 6.86(41) | 2 | ||||
6.5(8) | 11 | 6.92(11) | 48 | −0.1% | |||
6.8(4) | 13 | 6.93(15) | 42 | ||||
7.1(2) | 9 | ||||||
7.22(42) | 37 | ||||||
6.7 | 6.9 | ||||||
β Cet | 5.03(40) | 19 | 5.29(8) | 46 | |||
5.31(6) | 35 | 5.329(5) | 44 | ||||
5.4(8) | 16 | 5.51(25) | 48 | +3.4% | |||
5.66(39) | 45 | ||||||
6.5 | 24 | ||||||
7.4(9) | 3 | ||||||
8.0 | 20 | ||||||
5.6 | 5.3 | ||||||
α TrA | 11.6(17) | 16 | 9.24(2) | 48 | |||
8.98(10) | 35 | ||||||
9.81(39) | 40 | ||||||
15.0(18) | 3 | ||||||
9.5 | |||||||
α Hya | 9.30(39) | 9 | 9.73(10) | 38 | |||
9.4(9) | 23 | 9.335(16) | 44 | ||||
9.9(10) | 13 | 9.36(6) | 48 | +0.3% | |||
10.0(15) | 16 | ||||||
14.0(17) | 3 | ||||||
10.0 | 9.4 | ||||||
ζ Ara | 7.21(21) | 39 | 7.09(12) | 48 | |||
7.2 | 20 | ||||||
7.6(11) | 16 | ||||||
7.62(53) | 45 | ||||||
9.0 | 24 | ||||||
11.0(13) | 3 | ||||||
7.6 | |||||||
δ Oph | 10(1) | 21 | 9.50(50) | 30 | |||
10.03(10) | 35 | 9.93(9) | 48 | +2.1% | |||
10.18(20) | 25 | 9.946(13) | 44 | ||||
10.22(71) | 45 | 10.47(12) | 38 | ||||
10.23(31) | 40 | ||||||
11.6(17) | 16 | ||||||
11.0 | 24 | ||||||
13 | 1 | ||||||
13.0(16) | 3 | ||||||
26(7) | 8 | ||||||
10.4 | 10.0 | ||||||
γ Hyi | 9.5 | 33 | 8.79(9) | 48 | |||
9.8(15) | 16 | ||||||
10.0(12) | 3 | ||||||
9.7 | |||||||
o1 Ori | 7.1(21) | 3 | 9.78(10) | 48 | |||
σ Lib | 11.0(13) | 3 | 11.33(10) | 48 | |||
12.05(83) | 45 | ||||||
12.5 | 20 | ||||||
13.0 | 24 | ||||||
12.1 | |||||||
γ Ret | 7.5(2) | 32 | 7.44(2) | 48 | |||
8.0 | 33 | ||||||
11.0(33) | 16 | ||||||
7.8 | |||||||
CE Tau | 9.4(11) | 3 | 9.1(8) | 15 | 9.3(5) | 34 | |
13 | 1 | 10.9(10) | 14 | 9.83(7) | 30 | ||
13.0(20) | 16 | 17(1) | 18 | 9.97(8) | 48 | +3.7% | |
10.68(21) | 27 | ||||||
11.5 | 12.1 | 10.0 | |||||
T Cet | 13.1(39) | 16 | 9.70(8) | 48 | |||
14.5 | 43 | ||||||
14.1 | |||||||
TX Psc | 6.2 | 12 | 8.40(5) | 29 | 10.23(36) | 48 | −10.6% |
9.5(5) | 11 | 8.9(10) | 4 | 11.2(10) | 28 | ||
9.31(75) | 10 | 11.44(30) | 31 | ||||
10(3) | 6 | ||||||
10.2(25) | 7 | ||||||
8.0 | 8.5 | 10.9 | |||||
W Ori | 9.63(4) | 48 | −2.8% | ||||
9.91(60) | 31 | ||||||
9.7 | |||||||
R Scl | 12.2 | 22 | 10.06(5) | 48 | −1.4% | ||
12.0 | 26 | 10.2(5) | 47 | ||||
12.1 | 41 | ||||||
12.75(98) | 36 | ||||||
12.3 | 10.1 | ||||||
TW Oph | 10.4(5) | 17 | 9.46(30) | 48 |
(1) Hertzsprung (1922); (2) Hanbury Brown et al. (1967); (3) Wesselink, Paranya & DeVorkin (1972); (4) de Vegt (1974); (5) Hanbury Brown, Davis & Allen (1974); (6) Morbey & Fletcher (1974); (7) Dunham et al. (1975); (8) Currie et al. (1976); (9) Blackwell & Shallis (1977); (10) Ridgway, Wells & Joyce (1977); (11) Barnes et al. (1978); (12) Scargle & Strecker (1979); (13) Blackwell, Petford & Shallis (1980); (14) White (1980); (15) Beavers, Cadmus & Eitter (1982); (16) Ochsenbein & Halbwachs (1982); (17) Ridgway et al. (1982); (18) White, Kreidl & Goldberg (1982); (19) Eriksson, Linsky & Simon (1983); (20) Johnson & Wright (1983); (21) Leggett et al. (1986); (22) Rowan-Robinson et al. (1986); (23) Bell & Gustafsson (1989); (24) Slee et al. (1989); (25) Blackwell et al. (1990); (26) Judge & Stencel (1991); (27) Quirrenbach et al. (1993); (28) Quirrenbach et al. (1994); (29) Richichi et al. (1995); (30) Dyck et al. (1996); (31) Dyck et al. (1996); (32) Bedding et al. (1997); (33) Dumm & Schild (1998); (34) Dyck, van Belle & Thompson (1998); (35) Cohen et al. (1999); (36) Yudin & Evans (2002); (37) Decin et al. (2003); (38) Mozurkewich et al. (2003); (39) Ohnaka et al (2005); (40) Engelke, Price & Kraemer (2006); (41) Dehaes et al. (2007); (42) Domiciano de Souza et al. (2008); (43) Ramstedt, Schöier & Olofsson (2009); (44) Richichi, Percheron & Davis (2009); (45) Lafrasse et al. (2010); (46) Berio et al. (2011); (47) Sacuto et al. (2011); (48) present work.
Name . | ϕind . | Reference . | ϕLO . | Reference . | ϕLBI . | Reference . | Difference . |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
α Car | 5.9(4) | 16 | 6.6(8) | 5 | |||
6.0(7) | 3 | 6.86(41) | 2 | ||||
6.5(8) | 11 | 6.92(11) | 48 | −0.1% | |||
6.8(4) | 13 | 6.93(15) | 42 | ||||
7.1(2) | 9 | ||||||
7.22(42) | 37 | ||||||
6.7 | 6.9 | ||||||
β Cet | 5.03(40) | 19 | 5.29(8) | 46 | |||
5.31(6) | 35 | 5.329(5) | 44 | ||||
5.4(8) | 16 | 5.51(25) | 48 | +3.4% | |||
5.66(39) | 45 | ||||||
6.5 | 24 | ||||||
7.4(9) | 3 | ||||||
8.0 | 20 | ||||||
5.6 | 5.3 | ||||||
α TrA | 11.6(17) | 16 | 9.24(2) | 48 | |||
8.98(10) | 35 | ||||||
9.81(39) | 40 | ||||||
15.0(18) | 3 | ||||||
9.5 | |||||||
α Hya | 9.30(39) | 9 | 9.73(10) | 38 | |||
9.4(9) | 23 | 9.335(16) | 44 | ||||
9.9(10) | 13 | 9.36(6) | 48 | +0.3% | |||
10.0(15) | 16 | ||||||
14.0(17) | 3 | ||||||
10.0 | 9.4 | ||||||
ζ Ara | 7.21(21) | 39 | 7.09(12) | 48 | |||
7.2 | 20 | ||||||
7.6(11) | 16 | ||||||
7.62(53) | 45 | ||||||
9.0 | 24 | ||||||
11.0(13) | 3 | ||||||
7.6 | |||||||
δ Oph | 10(1) | 21 | 9.50(50) | 30 | |||
10.03(10) | 35 | 9.93(9) | 48 | +2.1% | |||
10.18(20) | 25 | 9.946(13) | 44 | ||||
10.22(71) | 45 | 10.47(12) | 38 | ||||
10.23(31) | 40 | ||||||
11.6(17) | 16 | ||||||
11.0 | 24 | ||||||
13 | 1 | ||||||
13.0(16) | 3 | ||||||
26(7) | 8 | ||||||
10.4 | 10.0 | ||||||
γ Hyi | 9.5 | 33 | 8.79(9) | 48 | |||
9.8(15) | 16 | ||||||
10.0(12) | 3 | ||||||
9.7 | |||||||
o1 Ori | 7.1(21) | 3 | 9.78(10) | 48 | |||
σ Lib | 11.0(13) | 3 | 11.33(10) | 48 | |||
12.05(83) | 45 | ||||||
12.5 | 20 | ||||||
13.0 | 24 | ||||||
12.1 | |||||||
γ Ret | 7.5(2) | 32 | 7.44(2) | 48 | |||
8.0 | 33 | ||||||
11.0(33) | 16 | ||||||
7.8 | |||||||
CE Tau | 9.4(11) | 3 | 9.1(8) | 15 | 9.3(5) | 34 | |
13 | 1 | 10.9(10) | 14 | 9.83(7) | 30 | ||
13.0(20) | 16 | 17(1) | 18 | 9.97(8) | 48 | +3.7% | |
10.68(21) | 27 | ||||||
11.5 | 12.1 | 10.0 | |||||
T Cet | 13.1(39) | 16 | 9.70(8) | 48 | |||
14.5 | 43 | ||||||
14.1 | |||||||
TX Psc | 6.2 | 12 | 8.40(5) | 29 | 10.23(36) | 48 | −10.6% |
9.5(5) | 11 | 8.9(10) | 4 | 11.2(10) | 28 | ||
9.31(75) | 10 | 11.44(30) | 31 | ||||
10(3) | 6 | ||||||
10.2(25) | 7 | ||||||
8.0 | 8.5 | 10.9 | |||||
W Ori | 9.63(4) | 48 | −2.8% | ||||
9.91(60) | 31 | ||||||
9.7 | |||||||
R Scl | 12.2 | 22 | 10.06(5) | 48 | −1.4% | ||
12.0 | 26 | 10.2(5) | 47 | ||||
12.1 | 41 | ||||||
12.75(98) | 36 | ||||||
12.3 | 10.1 | ||||||
TW Oph | 10.4(5) | 17 | 9.46(30) | 48 |
Name . | ϕind . | Reference . | ϕLO . | Reference . | ϕLBI . | Reference . | Difference . |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
α Car | 5.9(4) | 16 | 6.6(8) | 5 | |||
6.0(7) | 3 | 6.86(41) | 2 | ||||
6.5(8) | 11 | 6.92(11) | 48 | −0.1% | |||
6.8(4) | 13 | 6.93(15) | 42 | ||||
7.1(2) | 9 | ||||||
7.22(42) | 37 | ||||||
6.7 | 6.9 | ||||||
β Cet | 5.03(40) | 19 | 5.29(8) | 46 | |||
5.31(6) | 35 | 5.329(5) | 44 | ||||
5.4(8) | 16 | 5.51(25) | 48 | +3.4% | |||
5.66(39) | 45 | ||||||
6.5 | 24 | ||||||
7.4(9) | 3 | ||||||
8.0 | 20 | ||||||
5.6 | 5.3 | ||||||
α TrA | 11.6(17) | 16 | 9.24(2) | 48 | |||
8.98(10) | 35 | ||||||
9.81(39) | 40 | ||||||
15.0(18) | 3 | ||||||
9.5 | |||||||
α Hya | 9.30(39) | 9 | 9.73(10) | 38 | |||
9.4(9) | 23 | 9.335(16) | 44 | ||||
9.9(10) | 13 | 9.36(6) | 48 | +0.3% | |||
10.0(15) | 16 | ||||||
14.0(17) | 3 | ||||||
10.0 | 9.4 | ||||||
ζ Ara | 7.21(21) | 39 | 7.09(12) | 48 | |||
7.2 | 20 | ||||||
7.6(11) | 16 | ||||||
7.62(53) | 45 | ||||||
9.0 | 24 | ||||||
11.0(13) | 3 | ||||||
7.6 | |||||||
δ Oph | 10(1) | 21 | 9.50(50) | 30 | |||
10.03(10) | 35 | 9.93(9) | 48 | +2.1% | |||
10.18(20) | 25 | 9.946(13) | 44 | ||||
10.22(71) | 45 | 10.47(12) | 38 | ||||
10.23(31) | 40 | ||||||
11.6(17) | 16 | ||||||
11.0 | 24 | ||||||
13 | 1 | ||||||
13.0(16) | 3 | ||||||
26(7) | 8 | ||||||
10.4 | 10.0 | ||||||
γ Hyi | 9.5 | 33 | 8.79(9) | 48 | |||
9.8(15) | 16 | ||||||
10.0(12) | 3 | ||||||
9.7 | |||||||
o1 Ori | 7.1(21) | 3 | 9.78(10) | 48 | |||
σ Lib | 11.0(13) | 3 | 11.33(10) | 48 | |||
12.05(83) | 45 | ||||||
12.5 | 20 | ||||||
13.0 | 24 | ||||||
12.1 | |||||||
γ Ret | 7.5(2) | 32 | 7.44(2) | 48 | |||
8.0 | 33 | ||||||
11.0(33) | 16 | ||||||
7.8 | |||||||
CE Tau | 9.4(11) | 3 | 9.1(8) | 15 | 9.3(5) | 34 | |
13 | 1 | 10.9(10) | 14 | 9.83(7) | 30 | ||
13.0(20) | 16 | 17(1) | 18 | 9.97(8) | 48 | +3.7% | |
10.68(21) | 27 | ||||||
11.5 | 12.1 | 10.0 | |||||
T Cet | 13.1(39) | 16 | 9.70(8) | 48 | |||
14.5 | 43 | ||||||
14.1 | |||||||
TX Psc | 6.2 | 12 | 8.40(5) | 29 | 10.23(36) | 48 | −10.6% |
9.5(5) | 11 | 8.9(10) | 4 | 11.2(10) | 28 | ||
9.31(75) | 10 | 11.44(30) | 31 | ||||
10(3) | 6 | ||||||
10.2(25) | 7 | ||||||
8.0 | 8.5 | 10.9 | |||||
W Ori | 9.63(4) | 48 | −2.8% | ||||
9.91(60) | 31 | ||||||
9.7 | |||||||
R Scl | 12.2 | 22 | 10.06(5) | 48 | −1.4% | ||
12.0 | 26 | 10.2(5) | 47 | ||||
12.1 | 41 | ||||||
12.75(98) | 36 | ||||||
12.3 | 10.1 | ||||||
TW Oph | 10.4(5) | 17 | 9.46(30) | 48 |
(1) Hertzsprung (1922); (2) Hanbury Brown et al. (1967); (3) Wesselink, Paranya & DeVorkin (1972); (4) de Vegt (1974); (5) Hanbury Brown, Davis & Allen (1974); (6) Morbey & Fletcher (1974); (7) Dunham et al. (1975); (8) Currie et al. (1976); (9) Blackwell & Shallis (1977); (10) Ridgway, Wells & Joyce (1977); (11) Barnes et al. (1978); (12) Scargle & Strecker (1979); (13) Blackwell, Petford & Shallis (1980); (14) White (1980); (15) Beavers, Cadmus & Eitter (1982); (16) Ochsenbein & Halbwachs (1982); (17) Ridgway et al. (1982); (18) White, Kreidl & Goldberg (1982); (19) Eriksson, Linsky & Simon (1983); (20) Johnson & Wright (1983); (21) Leggett et al. (1986); (22) Rowan-Robinson et al. (1986); (23) Bell & Gustafsson (1989); (24) Slee et al. (1989); (25) Blackwell et al. (1990); (26) Judge & Stencel (1991); (27) Quirrenbach et al. (1993); (28) Quirrenbach et al. (1994); (29) Richichi et al. (1995); (30) Dyck et al. (1996); (31) Dyck et al. (1996); (32) Bedding et al. (1997); (33) Dumm & Schild (1998); (34) Dyck, van Belle & Thompson (1998); (35) Cohen et al. (1999); (36) Yudin & Evans (2002); (37) Decin et al. (2003); (38) Mozurkewich et al. (2003); (39) Ohnaka et al (2005); (40) Engelke, Price & Kraemer (2006); (41) Dehaes et al. (2007); (42) Domiciano de Souza et al. (2008); (43) Ramstedt, Schöier & Olofsson (2009); (44) Richichi, Percheron & Davis (2009); (45) Lafrasse et al. (2010); (46) Berio et al. (2011); (47) Sacuto et al. (2011); (48) present work.
PERIOD–LUMINOSITY RELATION
Name . | |$\mathcal {R}_\mathrm{obs}$|/|$\mathcal {R}_{{\odot }}$|a . | log Teffb . | |$\log \mathcal {L}_\mathrm{obs}$|/|$\mathcal {L}_{{\odot }}$|c . | Mbold . | |$\mathcal {M}$|/|$\mathcal {M}_{{\odot }}$|e . | log gobsf . | Qg . |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
α Car | 71(4) | 3.845(6) | 4.03(5) | −5.34(13) | 8.0(3) | 1.64(5) | – |
β Cet | 17.5(9) | 3.668(9) | 2.21(6) | −0.54(14) | 3.0(3) | 2.43(6) | 0.879(121) |
α TrA | 119(2) | 3.638(10) | 3.66(4) | −4.41(11) | 7–8 | 1.16(3) | – |
α Hya | 55.7(7) | 3.633(10) | 2.98(4) | −2.71(10) | 4–5 | 1.60(5) | – |
ζ Ara | 114(4) | 3.628(10) | 3.58(5) | −4.21(12) | 7–8 | 1.20(4) | – |
δ Oph | 56.0(7) | 3.562(12) | 2.70(5) | −2.01(12) | 1.0(3) | 0.93(12) | – |
γ Hyi | 62(1) | 3.544(12) | 2.71(5) | −2.05(13) | 1.0(3) | 0.84(12) | – |
o1 Ori | 214(29) | 3.538(13) | 3.76(13) | −4.65(31) | 3–4 | 0.32(13) | 0.019(4) |
σ Lib | 108(3) | 3.538(13) | 3.17(5) | −3.18(14) | 1.5–2 | 0.61(7) | 0.024(2) |
γ Ret | 115(2) | 3.538(13) | 3.23(5) | −3.33(13) | 1.5–2 | 0.55(6) | 0.027(2) |
CE Tau | 601(83) | 3.531(13) | 4.63(13) | −6.83(32) | 8.0(3) | −0.21(12) | 0.033(7) |
T Cet | 275(34) | 3.531(13) | 3.91(12) | −5.03(30) | 3.0(3) | 0.01(11) | 0.059(11) |
TX Psc | 293(66) | 3.512(13) | 3.90|$\left(^{21}_{31}\right)$| | −5.02(61) | 1.8(3) | −0.30(21) | 0.056(17) |
W Ori | 406(185) | 3.415(17) | 3.83|$\left(^{51}_{37}\right)$| | −4.85(103) | 1–2 | −0.60|$\left(^{42}_{63}\right)$| | 0.032|$\left(^{30}_{20}\right)$| |
R Scl | 513(721) | 3.415(17) | 4.04|$\left(^{117}_{55}\right)$| | −5.35(201) | 2–3 | −0.59(75) | 0.050|$\left(^{76}_{44}\right)$| |
TW Oph | 278(102) | 3.415(17) | 3.50|$\left(^{42}_{34}\right)$| | −4.02(89) | 1.0(3) | −0.46|$\left(^{38}_{47}\right)$| | 0.040|$\left(^{32}_{21}\right)$| |
α Ret | 13.5(3) | 3.679(9) | 1.93(4) | −0.10(11) | 2.5–3 | 2.61(5) | – |
φ2 Ori | 8.8(1) | 3.669(9) | 1.52(4) | 0.95(10) | 1–2 | 2.73|$\left(^{13}_{19}\right)$| | – |
η Col | 37.1(12) | 3.668(9) | 2.77(5) | −2.17(12) | 5.0(3) | 2.00(4) | – |
λ Hya | 9.7(8) | 3.668(9) | 1.60(8) | 0.74(20) | 1–2 | 2.64|$\left(^{20}_{25}\right)$| | – |
γ Lib | 12.4(6) | 3.668(9) | 1.81(6) | 0.21(14) | 2.0(3) | 2.55(7) | – |
o Sgr | 11.7(9) | 3.668(9) | 1.76(7) | 0.33(19) | 2.0(3) | 2.60(8) | – |
ι Eri | 11.7(10) | 3.663(9) | 1.74(8) | 0.40(21) | 1–2 | 2.48|$\left(^{20}_{25}\right)$| | – |
θ Psc | 10.4(7) | 3.662(9) | 1.63(7) | 0.67(17) | 1–1.5 | 2.50(14) | – |
γ Scl | 12.3(1) | 3.654(10) | 1.75(4) | 0.37(10) | 1–1.5 | 2.35(10) | – |
HR 2113 | 35(4) | 3.647(10) | 2.62(10) | −1.82(24) | 3–4 | 1.90(11) | – |
ε TrA | 16.2(2) | 3.647(10) | 1.96(4) | −0.16(10) | 1–2 | 2.20|$\left(^{14}_{19}\right)$| | – |
η Cet | 13.6(1) | 3.647(10) | 1.81(4) | 0.22(10) | 1–1.5 | 2.26(9) | – |
HR 3282 | 78(6) | 3.636(10) | 3.28(8) | −3.45(20) | 6–7 | 1.47(8) | – |
HR 2411 | 22.7(10) | 3.629(10) | 2.18(6) | −0.72(14) | 1–2 | 1.90|$\left(^{16}_{21}\right)$| | – |
51 Hya | 11.6(6) | 3.629(10) | 1.60(6) | 0.74(16) | 1.0(3) | 2.30(12) | – |
Name . | |$\mathcal {R}_\mathrm{obs}$|/|$\mathcal {R}_{{\odot }}$|a . | log Teffb . | |$\log \mathcal {L}_\mathrm{obs}$|/|$\mathcal {L}_{{\odot }}$|c . | Mbold . | |$\mathcal {M}$|/|$\mathcal {M}_{{\odot }}$|e . | log gobsf . | Qg . |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
α Car | 71(4) | 3.845(6) | 4.03(5) | −5.34(13) | 8.0(3) | 1.64(5) | – |
β Cet | 17.5(9) | 3.668(9) | 2.21(6) | −0.54(14) | 3.0(3) | 2.43(6) | 0.879(121) |
α TrA | 119(2) | 3.638(10) | 3.66(4) | −4.41(11) | 7–8 | 1.16(3) | – |
α Hya | 55.7(7) | 3.633(10) | 2.98(4) | −2.71(10) | 4–5 | 1.60(5) | – |
ζ Ara | 114(4) | 3.628(10) | 3.58(5) | −4.21(12) | 7–8 | 1.20(4) | – |
δ Oph | 56.0(7) | 3.562(12) | 2.70(5) | −2.01(12) | 1.0(3) | 0.93(12) | – |
γ Hyi | 62(1) | 3.544(12) | 2.71(5) | −2.05(13) | 1.0(3) | 0.84(12) | – |
o1 Ori | 214(29) | 3.538(13) | 3.76(13) | −4.65(31) | 3–4 | 0.32(13) | 0.019(4) |
σ Lib | 108(3) | 3.538(13) | 3.17(5) | −3.18(14) | 1.5–2 | 0.61(7) | 0.024(2) |
γ Ret | 115(2) | 3.538(13) | 3.23(5) | −3.33(13) | 1.5–2 | 0.55(6) | 0.027(2) |
CE Tau | 601(83) | 3.531(13) | 4.63(13) | −6.83(32) | 8.0(3) | −0.21(12) | 0.033(7) |
T Cet | 275(34) | 3.531(13) | 3.91(12) | −5.03(30) | 3.0(3) | 0.01(11) | 0.059(11) |
TX Psc | 293(66) | 3.512(13) | 3.90|$\left(^{21}_{31}\right)$| | −5.02(61) | 1.8(3) | −0.30(21) | 0.056(17) |
W Ori | 406(185) | 3.415(17) | 3.83|$\left(^{51}_{37}\right)$| | −4.85(103) | 1–2 | −0.60|$\left(^{42}_{63}\right)$| | 0.032|$\left(^{30}_{20}\right)$| |
R Scl | 513(721) | 3.415(17) | 4.04|$\left(^{117}_{55}\right)$| | −5.35(201) | 2–3 | −0.59(75) | 0.050|$\left(^{76}_{44}\right)$| |
TW Oph | 278(102) | 3.415(17) | 3.50|$\left(^{42}_{34}\right)$| | −4.02(89) | 1.0(3) | −0.46|$\left(^{38}_{47}\right)$| | 0.040|$\left(^{32}_{21}\right)$| |
α Ret | 13.5(3) | 3.679(9) | 1.93(4) | −0.10(11) | 2.5–3 | 2.61(5) | – |
φ2 Ori | 8.8(1) | 3.669(9) | 1.52(4) | 0.95(10) | 1–2 | 2.73|$\left(^{13}_{19}\right)$| | – |
η Col | 37.1(12) | 3.668(9) | 2.77(5) | −2.17(12) | 5.0(3) | 2.00(4) | – |
λ Hya | 9.7(8) | 3.668(9) | 1.60(8) | 0.74(20) | 1–2 | 2.64|$\left(^{20}_{25}\right)$| | – |
γ Lib | 12.4(6) | 3.668(9) | 1.81(6) | 0.21(14) | 2.0(3) | 2.55(7) | – |
o Sgr | 11.7(9) | 3.668(9) | 1.76(7) | 0.33(19) | 2.0(3) | 2.60(8) | – |
ι Eri | 11.7(10) | 3.663(9) | 1.74(8) | 0.40(21) | 1–2 | 2.48|$\left(^{20}_{25}\right)$| | – |
θ Psc | 10.4(7) | 3.662(9) | 1.63(7) | 0.67(17) | 1–1.5 | 2.50(14) | – |
γ Scl | 12.3(1) | 3.654(10) | 1.75(4) | 0.37(10) | 1–1.5 | 2.35(10) | – |
HR 2113 | 35(4) | 3.647(10) | 2.62(10) | −1.82(24) | 3–4 | 1.90(11) | – |
ε TrA | 16.2(2) | 3.647(10) | 1.96(4) | −0.16(10) | 1–2 | 2.20|$\left(^{14}_{19}\right)$| | – |
η Cet | 13.6(1) | 3.647(10) | 1.81(4) | 0.22(10) | 1–1.5 | 2.26(9) | – |
HR 3282 | 78(6) | 3.636(10) | 3.28(8) | −3.45(20) | 6–7 | 1.47(8) | – |
HR 2411 | 22.7(10) | 3.629(10) | 2.18(6) | −0.72(14) | 1–2 | 1.90|$\left(^{16}_{21}\right)$| | – |
51 Hya | 11.6(6) | 3.629(10) | 1.60(6) | 0.74(16) | 1.0(3) | 2.30(12) | – |
aRosseland radius derived from the angular diameter ϕ and the parallax ϖ.
bEffective temperature of the model (in K).
cEmpirical stellar luminosity, derived from equation (2).
dBolometric magnitude derived from the stellar luminosity.
eStellar mass derived from the position along the evolutionary track in the HRD. If two tracks with different masses pass through the star location, two possible mass values are listed.
fSurface gravity, derived from equation (4).
gPulsation constant (in days), derived from equation (5).
Name . | |$\mathcal {R}_\mathrm{obs}$|/|$\mathcal {R}_{{\odot }}$|a . | log Teffb . | |$\log \mathcal {L}_\mathrm{obs}$|/|$\mathcal {L}_{{\odot }}$|c . | Mbold . | |$\mathcal {M}$|/|$\mathcal {M}_{{\odot }}$|e . | log gobsf . | Qg . |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
α Car | 71(4) | 3.845(6) | 4.03(5) | −5.34(13) | 8.0(3) | 1.64(5) | – |
β Cet | 17.5(9) | 3.668(9) | 2.21(6) | −0.54(14) | 3.0(3) | 2.43(6) | 0.879(121) |
α TrA | 119(2) | 3.638(10) | 3.66(4) | −4.41(11) | 7–8 | 1.16(3) | – |
α Hya | 55.7(7) | 3.633(10) | 2.98(4) | −2.71(10) | 4–5 | 1.60(5) | – |
ζ Ara | 114(4) | 3.628(10) | 3.58(5) | −4.21(12) | 7–8 | 1.20(4) | – |
δ Oph | 56.0(7) | 3.562(12) | 2.70(5) | −2.01(12) | 1.0(3) | 0.93(12) | – |
γ Hyi | 62(1) | 3.544(12) | 2.71(5) | −2.05(13) | 1.0(3) | 0.84(12) | – |
o1 Ori | 214(29) | 3.538(13) | 3.76(13) | −4.65(31) | 3–4 | 0.32(13) | 0.019(4) |
σ Lib | 108(3) | 3.538(13) | 3.17(5) | −3.18(14) | 1.5–2 | 0.61(7) | 0.024(2) |
γ Ret | 115(2) | 3.538(13) | 3.23(5) | −3.33(13) | 1.5–2 | 0.55(6) | 0.027(2) |
CE Tau | 601(83) | 3.531(13) | 4.63(13) | −6.83(32) | 8.0(3) | −0.21(12) | 0.033(7) |
T Cet | 275(34) | 3.531(13) | 3.91(12) | −5.03(30) | 3.0(3) | 0.01(11) | 0.059(11) |
TX Psc | 293(66) | 3.512(13) | 3.90|$\left(^{21}_{31}\right)$| | −5.02(61) | 1.8(3) | −0.30(21) | 0.056(17) |
W Ori | 406(185) | 3.415(17) | 3.83|$\left(^{51}_{37}\right)$| | −4.85(103) | 1–2 | −0.60|$\left(^{42}_{63}\right)$| | 0.032|$\left(^{30}_{20}\right)$| |
R Scl | 513(721) | 3.415(17) | 4.04|$\left(^{117}_{55}\right)$| | −5.35(201) | 2–3 | −0.59(75) | 0.050|$\left(^{76}_{44}\right)$| |
TW Oph | 278(102) | 3.415(17) | 3.50|$\left(^{42}_{34}\right)$| | −4.02(89) | 1.0(3) | −0.46|$\left(^{38}_{47}\right)$| | 0.040|$\left(^{32}_{21}\right)$| |
α Ret | 13.5(3) | 3.679(9) | 1.93(4) | −0.10(11) | 2.5–3 | 2.61(5) | – |
φ2 Ori | 8.8(1) | 3.669(9) | 1.52(4) | 0.95(10) | 1–2 | 2.73|$\left(^{13}_{19}\right)$| | – |
η Col | 37.1(12) | 3.668(9) | 2.77(5) | −2.17(12) | 5.0(3) | 2.00(4) | – |
λ Hya | 9.7(8) | 3.668(9) | 1.60(8) | 0.74(20) | 1–2 | 2.64|$\left(^{20}_{25}\right)$| | – |
γ Lib | 12.4(6) | 3.668(9) | 1.81(6) | 0.21(14) | 2.0(3) | 2.55(7) | – |
o Sgr | 11.7(9) | 3.668(9) | 1.76(7) | 0.33(19) | 2.0(3) | 2.60(8) | – |
ι Eri | 11.7(10) | 3.663(9) | 1.74(8) | 0.40(21) | 1–2 | 2.48|$\left(^{20}_{25}\right)$| | – |
θ Psc | 10.4(7) | 3.662(9) | 1.63(7) | 0.67(17) | 1–1.5 | 2.50(14) | – |
γ Scl | 12.3(1) | 3.654(10) | 1.75(4) | 0.37(10) | 1–1.5 | 2.35(10) | – |
HR 2113 | 35(4) | 3.647(10) | 2.62(10) | −1.82(24) | 3–4 | 1.90(11) | – |
ε TrA | 16.2(2) | 3.647(10) | 1.96(4) | −0.16(10) | 1–2 | 2.20|$\left(^{14}_{19}\right)$| | – |
η Cet | 13.6(1) | 3.647(10) | 1.81(4) | 0.22(10) | 1–1.5 | 2.26(9) | – |
HR 3282 | 78(6) | 3.636(10) | 3.28(8) | −3.45(20) | 6–7 | 1.47(8) | – |
HR 2411 | 22.7(10) | 3.629(10) | 2.18(6) | −0.72(14) | 1–2 | 1.90|$\left(^{16}_{21}\right)$| | – |
51 Hya | 11.6(6) | 3.629(10) | 1.60(6) | 0.74(16) | 1.0(3) | 2.30(12) | – |
Name . | |$\mathcal {R}_\mathrm{obs}$|/|$\mathcal {R}_{{\odot }}$|a . | log Teffb . | |$\log \mathcal {L}_\mathrm{obs}$|/|$\mathcal {L}_{{\odot }}$|c . | Mbold . | |$\mathcal {M}$|/|$\mathcal {M}_{{\odot }}$|e . | log gobsf . | Qg . |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
α Car | 71(4) | 3.845(6) | 4.03(5) | −5.34(13) | 8.0(3) | 1.64(5) | – |
β Cet | 17.5(9) | 3.668(9) | 2.21(6) | −0.54(14) | 3.0(3) | 2.43(6) | 0.879(121) |
α TrA | 119(2) | 3.638(10) | 3.66(4) | −4.41(11) | 7–8 | 1.16(3) | – |
α Hya | 55.7(7) | 3.633(10) | 2.98(4) | −2.71(10) | 4–5 | 1.60(5) | – |
ζ Ara | 114(4) | 3.628(10) | 3.58(5) | −4.21(12) | 7–8 | 1.20(4) | – |
δ Oph | 56.0(7) | 3.562(12) | 2.70(5) | −2.01(12) | 1.0(3) | 0.93(12) | – |
γ Hyi | 62(1) | 3.544(12) | 2.71(5) | −2.05(13) | 1.0(3) | 0.84(12) | – |
o1 Ori | 214(29) | 3.538(13) | 3.76(13) | −4.65(31) | 3–4 | 0.32(13) | 0.019(4) |
σ Lib | 108(3) | 3.538(13) | 3.17(5) | −3.18(14) | 1.5–2 | 0.61(7) | 0.024(2) |
γ Ret | 115(2) | 3.538(13) | 3.23(5) | −3.33(13) | 1.5–2 | 0.55(6) | 0.027(2) |
CE Tau | 601(83) | 3.531(13) | 4.63(13) | −6.83(32) | 8.0(3) | −0.21(12) | 0.033(7) |
T Cet | 275(34) | 3.531(13) | 3.91(12) | −5.03(30) | 3.0(3) | 0.01(11) | 0.059(11) |
TX Psc | 293(66) | 3.512(13) | 3.90|$\left(^{21}_{31}\right)$| | −5.02(61) | 1.8(3) | −0.30(21) | 0.056(17) |
W Ori | 406(185) | 3.415(17) | 3.83|$\left(^{51}_{37}\right)$| | −4.85(103) | 1–2 | −0.60|$\left(^{42}_{63}\right)$| | 0.032|$\left(^{30}_{20}\right)$| |
R Scl | 513(721) | 3.415(17) | 4.04|$\left(^{117}_{55}\right)$| | −5.35(201) | 2–3 | −0.59(75) | 0.050|$\left(^{76}_{44}\right)$| |
TW Oph | 278(102) | 3.415(17) | 3.50|$\left(^{42}_{34}\right)$| | −4.02(89) | 1.0(3) | −0.46|$\left(^{38}_{47}\right)$| | 0.040|$\left(^{32}_{21}\right)$| |
α Ret | 13.5(3) | 3.679(9) | 1.93(4) | −0.10(11) | 2.5–3 | 2.61(5) | – |
φ2 Ori | 8.8(1) | 3.669(9) | 1.52(4) | 0.95(10) | 1–2 | 2.73|$\left(^{13}_{19}\right)$| | – |
η Col | 37.1(12) | 3.668(9) | 2.77(5) | −2.17(12) | 5.0(3) | 2.00(4) | – |
λ Hya | 9.7(8) | 3.668(9) | 1.60(8) | 0.74(20) | 1–2 | 2.64|$\left(^{20}_{25}\right)$| | – |
γ Lib | 12.4(6) | 3.668(9) | 1.81(6) | 0.21(14) | 2.0(3) | 2.55(7) | – |
o Sgr | 11.7(9) | 3.668(9) | 1.76(7) | 0.33(19) | 2.0(3) | 2.60(8) | – |
ι Eri | 11.7(10) | 3.663(9) | 1.74(8) | 0.40(21) | 1–2 | 2.48|$\left(^{20}_{25}\right)$| | – |
θ Psc | 10.4(7) | 3.662(9) | 1.63(7) | 0.67(17) | 1–1.5 | 2.50(14) | – |
γ Scl | 12.3(1) | 3.654(10) | 1.75(4) | 0.37(10) | 1–1.5 | 2.35(10) | – |
HR 2113 | 35(4) | 3.647(10) | 2.62(10) | −1.82(24) | 3–4 | 1.90(11) | – |
ε TrA | 16.2(2) | 3.647(10) | 1.96(4) | −0.16(10) | 1–2 | 2.20|$\left(^{14}_{19}\right)$| | – |
η Cet | 13.6(1) | 3.647(10) | 1.81(4) | 0.22(10) | 1–1.5 | 2.26(9) | – |
HR 3282 | 78(6) | 3.636(10) | 3.28(8) | −3.45(20) | 6–7 | 1.47(8) | – |
HR 2411 | 22.7(10) | 3.629(10) | 2.18(6) | −0.72(14) | 1–2 | 1.90|$\left(^{16}_{21}\right)$| | – |
51 Hya | 11.6(6) | 3.629(10) | 1.60(6) | 0.74(16) | 1.0(3) | 2.30(12) | – |
aRosseland radius derived from the angular diameter ϕ and the parallax ϖ.
bEffective temperature of the model (in K).
cEmpirical stellar luminosity, derived from equation (2).
dBolometric magnitude derived from the stellar luminosity.
eStellar mass derived from the position along the evolutionary track in the HRD. If two tracks with different masses pass through the star location, two possible mass values are listed.
fSurface gravity, derived from equation (4).
gPulsation constant (in days), derived from equation (5).
We note that masses should increase along each sequence, as predicted by theory (e.g. fig. 8 of Wood 1990). This is indeed the case, with our observed sample, with the exception of W Ori (|${\mathcal {M} = 1.5\,\mathcal {M}_{{\odot }}}$|) and T Cet (|${\mathcal {M} = 3\,\mathcal {M}_{{\odot }}}$|) along sequence B. Taking into account the large uncertainty of its bolometric magnitude, Mbol = −5(1), derived from its absolute luminosity (Table 6), the location of the C-rich star W Ori on sequence B is rather uncertain. Using instead Mbol = −4 eliminates the problem, since it moves W Ori to its right position along sequence C, where the three other carbon stars of our sample are located.
CONCLUSION
We present new determinations of the angular diameter of a set of 10 O-rich giants, two supergiants and four C-rich giants, observed in the K band (|${\scr {R}= 1500}$|) during several runs of a few nights, distributed over 2 years, using the VLTI/AMBER facility. They are obtained from the fit of synthetic SPI visibility and triple product on the true data. The synthetic SPI observables are derived by using a CLV profile calculated from marcs model atmospheres.
We show that the results are moderately impacted (<1 per cent in angular diameter) by the variation of the model input parameters Teff, log g and ξturb. During the observing period, using configurations covering different baseline angles, we find no significant variation of the angular diameter, except for TX Psc, a result which needs to be confirmed with complementary observations. For the eight targets previously measured by LBI in the same spectral band, our new angular diameter values are in good agreement with those of the literature. Except for TX Psc, the relative deviations between our values and those of the literature are less than 5 per cent, which validates our method. For TX Psc, a substantial temporal variation of the angular diameter, suspected to be correlated with the visual magnitude, could be invoked to account for the larger discrepancy. For the eight other targets, our values are first determinations, since no angular diameter measurements have been published yet for these stars.
These angular diameters are used to place the stars in the HRD and to derive their masses. For stars with a known technetium content, we confront their location in the HRD to the prediction that s-process nucleosynthesis producing technetium operates in TP-AGB stars. The two Tc-rich stars (o1 Ori and TX Psc) indeed fall along the TP-AGB, as expected. However, the low-mass carbon-rich star W Ori, despite being located close to the top of the low-mass TP-AGB, has been flagged as devoid of Tc, which, if confirmed, would put interesting constraints on the s-process in low-mass carbon stars.
Finally, we compute the pulsation constant for the pulsating stars with available periods of variation. Their location along the pulsation sequences in the period–luminosity diagram confirms the mass dependency predicted by theory, except for W Ori and T Cet.
Those results, based on measurements of visibilities and triple products, illustrate the several ways to include LBI observations in the general investigation process in the field of stellar astrophysics.
The authors thank the ESO-Paranal VLTI team for supporting their AMBER observations, especially the night astronomers A. Mérand, G. Montagnier, F. Patru, J.-B. Le Bouquin, S. Rengaswamy, and W. J. de Wit, the VLTI group coordinator S. Brillant, and the telescope and instrument operators A. Cortes and J. Cortes, A. Pino, C. Herrera, D. Castex, S. Cerda and C. Cid. AJ is grateful to T. Masseron for his ongoing support on the use of the marcs code. The authors also thank the Programme National de Physique Stellaire (PNPS) for supporting part of this collaborative research. SS was partly supported by the Austrian Science Fund through FWF project P19503-N16; AC was supported by FRS-FNRS (Belgium; grant 2.4513.11); EP is supported by PRODEX; KE gratefully acknowledges support from the Swedish Research Council. This study used the SIMBAD and VIZIER data bases at the CDS, Strasbourg (France), and NASA's ADS bibliographic services.
Based on observations made with ESO telescopes at the Paranal Observatory under Belgian VISA Guaranteed Time programme IDs 083.D-029(A/B), 084.D-0131(A/B) and 086.D-0067(A/B/C).
Acronym for ‘SPectro-Interferometric Data Analysis Software Tool’.
Acronym for ‘Fringe-tracking Instrument of NIce and TOrino’.
In the K band, we include all isotopomers of CO, C2, CN as well as H2O16, and the atomic lists extracted from Uppsala-VALD.
We note, however, that the mass inferred from the HRD tracks corresponds to the initial mass. However, substantial mass loss along the evolution may significantly reduce the current mass below its initial value, implying that gobs, as we derive it, could be somewhat overestimated.