Left Ringing: Betelgeuse Illuminates the Connection Between Convective outbursts, Mode switching, and Mass Ejection in Red Supergiants
Betelgeuse, the nearest red supergiant, dimmed to an unprecedented level in early 2020. The star emerged from this Great Dimming episode with its typical, roughly 400-day pulsation cycle halved, and a new dominant period of around 200 days. The dimming event has been attributed to a surface mass eje...
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Main Authors | , , , , |
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Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
16.05.2023
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Betelgeuse, the nearest red supergiant, dimmed to an unprecedented level in
early 2020. The star emerged from this Great Dimming episode with its typical,
roughly 400-day pulsation cycle halved, and a new dominant period of around 200
days. The dimming event has been attributed to a surface mass ejection, in
which rising material drove shocks through the stellar atmosphere and expelled
some material, partially obscuring the star as it formed molecules and dust. In
this paper, we use hydrodynamic simulations to reveal the connections between
Betelgeuse's vigorously convective envelope, the surface mass ejection, and the
pulsation mode switching that ensued. An anomalously hot convective plume,
generated rarely but naturally in the star's turbulent envelope, can rise and
break free from the surface, powering an upwelling that becomes the surface
mass ejection. The rising plume also breaks the phase coherence of the star's
pulsation, causing the surface to keep expanding even as the deeper layers
contract. This drives a switch from the 400-day fundamental mode of pulsation,
in which the whole star expands and contracts synchronously, to the 200-day
first overtone, where a radial node separates the interior and exterior of the
envelope moving in opposite phase. We predict that the star's convective
motions will damp the overtone oscillation and Betelgeuse will return to its
previous, 400-day fundamental mode pulsation in the next 5-10 years. With its
resolved surface and unprecedentedly detailed characterization, Betelgeuse
opens a window to episodic surface mass ejection in the late-stage evolution of
massive stars. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2305.09732 |