In 1904 it was announced that Henrietta Leavitt had discovered that the star, then known as BD −22°4575, is a variable star.[11] It was given its variable star designation, VX Sagittarii, in 1911.[12] The star is classed as a cool semiregular variable of type SRc with a pulsational period of 732 days. The variations sometimes have an amplitude comparable to a long period variable, at other times they are much smaller. The spectral type varies between M4e around visual maximum and M9.8e at minimum light, and the luminosity class is Ia indicating a bright supergiant. The spectrum shows emission lines indicating that the star is losing mass through a strong stellar wind.[8]
The annual parallax of VX Sagittarii has been measured as 0.64±0.06 mas, indicating a distance of about 5,100 light years. This is compatible with the distance to Sagittarius OB1, the stellar association that VX Sagittarii is thought to belong to. Its radial velocity and proper motions are also consistent with other members of the association.[6]
Stellar characteristics
The effective temperature of VX Sagittarii is variable from around 2,400 K at visual minimum to around 3,300 K near maximum. Such low temperatures are comparable to the very coolest AGB stars and unprecedented for a massive supergiant.[7][8] Its atmosphere is extended, irregular, and variable during the pulsations of the star, but the bolometric luminosity varies less than the visual brightness and is calculated to be about 195,000 L☉. At an effective temperature of 3,300 K, the radius is expected to be somewhere between 1,120 R☉ and 1,550 R☉.[6] Older studies frequently calculated higher luminosities.[13][14]
The atmosphere of VX Sgr shows molecular water layers and SiO masers in the atmosphere, typical of an OH/IR star.[15] The masers have been used to derive a distance of 1,590 parsecs.[16] The spectrum also indicates strong VO and CN. In many respects the atmosphere is similar to low mass AGB stars such as Mira variables, but with a supergiant's luminosity and size.[7]
Another paper from May 2018 suggests that VX Sagitarii may be a hypergiant.[6] This would make it one of the very rare red hypergiant stars. However, a 2021 paper concludes that VX Sagittarii is a massive AGB star, rather than a red supergiant or hypergiant. Because it displays rubidium in its spectrum and has a high mass loss and luminosity, it is possible that it is a type of AGB star known as a super-AGB star, a type of star with masses in between low-mass stars and high-mass stars.[4]
^ abSamus, N. N.; Durlevich, O. V.; et al. (2009). "VizieR Online Data Catalog: General Catalogue of Variable Stars (Samus+ 2007-2013)". VizieR On-line Data Catalog: B/GCVS. Originally Published in: 2009yCat....102025S. 1. Bibcode:2009yCat....102025S.
^Wallstrom, S. H. J.; Danilovich, T.; Muller, H. S. P.; Gottlieb, C. A.; Maes, S.; Van de Sande, M.; Decin, L.; Richards, A. M. S.; Baudry, A.; Bolte, J.; Ceulemans, T.; De Ceuster, F.; de Koter, A.; Mellah, I. El; Esseldeurs, M. (7 December 2023). "ATOMIUM: Molecular inventory of 17 oxygen-rich evolved stars observed with ALMA". Astronomy & Astrophysics. 681: A50. arXiv:2312.03467. doi:10.1051/0004-6361/202347632. ISSN0004-6361.
^De Jager, C.; Nieuwenhuijzen, H.; Van Der Hucht, K. A. (1988). "Mass loss rates in the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram". Astronomy and Astrophysics Supplement Series. 72: 259. Bibcode:1988A&AS...72..259D.
Lu, R. -S.; et al. (2010), "High-frequency VLBI Imaging of Sgr A* and VX Sgr", Proceedings of the 10th European VLBI Network Symposium and EVN Users Meeting: VLBI and the new generation of radio arrays. September 20-24, 2010. Manchester, UK, vol. 10, p. 087, Bibcode:2010evn..confE..87L, doi:10.22323/1.125.0087, 87.
Kamohara, Ryuichi; et al. (April 2005), "Time Variation of SiO Masers in VX Sagittarii over an Optically Quiescent Phase", Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan, 57 (2): 341–345, Bibcode:2005PASJ...57..341K, doi:10.1093/pasj/57.2.341.
Yates, J. A.; et al. (2002), Mineese, Victor; Reid, Mark (eds.), "The H2O maser proper motions of RT Vir and VX Sgr", Cosmic Masers: From Proto-Stars to Black Holes, IAU Symposium #206, held 5-10 March 2001 in Angra dos Reis, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, vol. 206, San Francisco: Astronomical Society of the Pacific, p. 298, Bibcode:2002IAUS..206..298Y.
Pashchenko, M. I.; Rudnitskii, G. M. (May 1999), "Observations of late-type variable stars in the water-vapor radio line. The supergiant VX Sagittarii", Astronomy Reports, 43 (5): 311–324, Bibcode:1999ARep...43..311P.
Doeleman, S. S.; et al. (1998), Zensus, J. A.; Taylor, G. B.; Wrobel, J. M. (eds.), "86 GHz VLBI Imaging of the SiO Masers in VX SGR", Radio Emission from Galactic and Extragalactic Compact Sources, IAU Colloquium 164, ASP Conference Series, vol. 144, p. 363, Bibcode:1998ASPC..144..363D.
Zell, Philip J.; Fix, John D. (July 1996), "The Spatial Distribution of Circularly Polarized 1612 MHz OH Maser Emission From VX SGR", Astronomical Journal, 112: 252, Bibcode:1996AJ....112..252Z, doi:10.1086/118007.
Trigilio, C.; et al. (1996), Pallavicini, Roberto; Dupree, Andrea K. (eds.), "Magnetic field measurements in the circumstellar envelope of VX SGR", Cool stars, stellar systems, and the sun: Proceedings of the 9th Cambridge workshop; held 3-6 October 1995 in Florence, Italy, Astronomical Society of the Pacific Conference Series, vol. 109, San Francisco: Astronomical Society of the Pacific, p. 549, Bibcode:1996ASPC..109..549T.
Greenhill, Lincoln J.; et al. (June 1994), Breckinridge, James B. (ed.), "Circumstellar envelope of VX SGR resolved with long-baseline interferometry at millimeter and midinfrared wavelengths", Conference Proceedings of SPIE: Amplitude and Intensity Spatial Interferometry II, Amplitude and Intensity Spatial Interferometry II, vol. 2200, pp. 304–315, Bibcode:1994SPIE.2200..304G, doi:10.1117/12.177248, S2CID120318207.
Greenhill, L. J.; et al. (May 1993), "The Circumstellar Envelope of VX SGR", Bulletin of the American Astronomical Society, 25: 824, Bibcode:1993AAS...182.2203G.
Pijpers, F. P. (November 1990), "A model for the wind of the M supergiant VX Sagittarii", Astronomy and Astrophysics, 238: 256, Bibcode:1990A&A...238..256P.
Netzer, Nathan (July 1989), "Interaction of Dust and Radiation in Circumstellar Envelopes. I. The Expansion Velocity Gradient in the Envelope of VX Sagittarii", Astrophysical Journal, 342: 1068, Bibcode:1989ApJ...342.1068N, doi:10.1086/167663.
Chapman, J. M.; Cohen, R. J. (May 1986), "MERLIN observations of the circumstellar envelope of VX Sagittarius", Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 220 (3): 513–528, Bibcode:1986MNRAS.220..513C, doi:10.1093/mnras/220.3.513.
Smith, Horace A. (February 1978), "Beat Phenomena in the Light Curve of VX Sgr", The Journal of the American Association of Variable Star Observers, 6 (2): 63, Bibcode:1978JAVSO...6...63S.
Dinerstein, Harriet (1973), "VX Sagittarii: A Variable at Many Wavelengths", Journal of the American Association of Variable Star Observers, 2 (2): 52–59, Bibcode:1973JAVSO...2...52D.
Humphreys, Roberta M.; Lockwood, G. W. (March 1972), "Spectroscopic and Photometric Changes in the Peculiar Infrared Star VX Sagittarius", Astrophysical Journal, 172: L59, Bibcode:1972ApJ...172L..59H, doi:10.1086/180891.
Robinson, B. J.; et al. (March 1971), "Similarity of the OH Emissions from VX Sagittarii and VY Canis Majoris", Astrophysical Letters, 8: 171, Bibcode:1971ApL.....8..171R.