Skip to header Skip to main navigation Skip to main content Skip to footer

website of the Royal Observatory of Belgium

Home
Astronomy & Astrophysics

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Topics
    • Binary Stars
    • Massive Stars
      • 3-D Radiative Transfer Modelling
      • Colliding Winds
      • Hypergiants
      • Stellar Winds
    • Stellar Evolution
      • AGB Stars
      • Nebulae
    • Stellar Evolution
    • Stellar Rotation
    • Variable Stars
  • Projects
    • BINA
    • BISTRO
    • BRASS
    • Cloudy
    • Gaia
      • Gaia @ ROB
      • Gaia-ESO
      • Radial Velocities
    • HOACS
    • Hermes
    • LOK
    • MESS
    • MolPlan
      • MolPlan
      • Sakurai's Object
    • RUSTICCA
    • STARLAB
    • VMC
    • digit
  • Staff
  • Papers
  • Press Releases
  • Data and Codes
  • Meetings
  • Jobs
  • Outreach
    • Carte du Ciel
    • Posters
    • Refractor

AS 314: A Massive Dusty Hypergiant or a Low-Mass Post-Asymptotic Giant Branch Object?

02-2025

Bakhytkyzy, A. ; Miroshnichenko, A.S. ; Klochkova, V.G. ; Panchuk, V.E. ; Zharikov, S.V. ; Mahy, L. ; et al

AS 314: A Massive Dusty Hypergiant or a Low-Mass Post-Asymptotic Giant Branch Object?

 

Abstract :

AS 314 (V452 Sct) is a poorly studied early-type emission-line star, which exhibits an infrared excess at wavelengths longer than 10 μm. Its earlier studies have been limited to small amounts of observational data and led to controversial conclusions about its fundamental parameters and evolutionary status. Comparison of high-resolution spectra of AS 314 taken over 20 years ago with those of Luminous Blue Variables and other high-luminosity objects suggested its observed properties can be explained by a strong stellar wind from a distant (D∼10 kpc) massive star, possibly in a binary system. However, a recent assessment of its low-resolution spectrum along with a new distance from a Gaia parallax (∼1.6 kpc) resulted in an alternative hypothesis that AS 314 is a low-mass post-asymptotic giant branch (post-AGB) star. The latter hypothesis ignored the high-resolution data, which gave rise to the former explanation. We collected over 30 mostly high-resolution spectra taken in 1997─2023, supplemented them with results of long-term photometric surveys, compared the spectra and the spectral energy distribution with those of post-AGB objects and B/A supergiants, and concluded that the observed properties AS 314 are more consistent with those of the latter.


 

Publication: Galaxies, Volume 13, Issue 2, id.17
DOI: 10.3390/galaxies13020017 
Bibcode: 2025Galax..13...17B
Keywords: spectroscopy; photometry; emission-line stars; circumstellar matter

Powered by Drupal

administration

  • Log in

Legal Notices

  • Legal Notices

Copyright © 2026 Royal Observatory of Belgium - All rights reserved

OD3@ROB