Bringing VY Canis Majoris Down to Size: An Improved Determination of Its Effective Temperature

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© 2006. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Printed in U.S.A.
, , Citation Philip Massey et al 2006 ApJ 646 1203 DOI 10.1086/505025

0004-637X/646/2/1203

Abstract

The star VY CMa is a late-type M supergiant with many peculiarities, mostly related to the intense circumstellar environment due to the star's high mass-loss rate. Claims have been made that would imply that this star is considerably more luminous (L ~ 5 × 105 L) and larger (R ~ 2800 R) than other Galactic red supergiants (RSGs). Indeed, such a location in the H-R diagram would be well within the "Hayashi forbidden zone," where stars cannot be in hydrostatic equilibrium. These extraordinary properties, however, rest on an assumed effective temperature of 2800-3000 K, far cooler than recent work has shown RSGs to be. To obtain a better estimate, we fit newly obtained spectrophotometry in the optical and NIR with the same MARCS models used for our recent determination of the physical properties of other RSGs; we also use V - K and V - J from the literature to derive an effective temperature. We find that the star likely has a temperature of 3650 K, a luminosity L ~ 6 × 104 L, and a radius of ~600 R. These values are consistent with VY CMa being an ordinary, evolved 15 M RSG and agree well with the Geneva evolutionary tracks. We find that the circumstellar dust region has a temperature of 760 K, and an effective radius of ~130 AU, if spherical geometry is assumed for the latter. What causes this star to have such a high mass loss and large variations in brightness (but with little change in color) remains a mystery at present, although we speculate that perhaps this star and NML Cyg are simply normal RSGs caught during an unusually unstable time.

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10.1086/505025