Abstract

Luminous Blue Variable (LBV) stars are evolved massive objects, previous to core-collapse supernova. LBVs are characterized by photometric and spectroscopic variability, produced by strong and dense winds, mass-loss events and very intense UV radiation. LBVs strongly disturb their surroundings by heating and shocking, and produce important amounts of dust. The study of the circumstellar material is therefore crucial to understand how these massive stars evolve, and also to characterize their effects onto the interstellar medium. The versatility of NIKA2 is a key in providing simultaneous observations of both the stellar continuum and the extended, circumstellar contribution. The NIKA2 frequencies (150 and 260 GHz) are in the range where thermal dust and free-free emission compete, and hence NIKA2 has the capacity to provide key information about the spatial distribution of circumstellar ionized gas, warm dust and nearby dark clouds; non-thermal emission is also possible even at these high frequencies. We show the results of the first NIKA2 survey towards five LBVs. We detected emission from four stars, three of them immersed in tenuous circumstellar material. The spectral indices show a complex distribution and allowed us to separate and characterize different components. We also found nearby dark clouds, with spectral indices typical of thermal emission from dust. Spectral indices of the detected stars are negative and hard to be explained only by free-free processes. In one of the sources, G79.29+0.46, we also found a strong correlation of the 1mm and 2mm continuum emission with respect to nested molecular shells at ≈1 pc from the LBV. The spectral index in this region clearly separates four components: the LBV star, a bubble characterized by free-free emission, and a shell interacting with a nearby infrared dark cloud.

Highlights

  • Luminous Blue Variable (LBV) stars are among the most massive objects, previous to corecollapse supernova (SN)

  • The G79.29+0.46 field is dominated by bright and intense emission running from southeast to west. This emission corresponds to an infrared dark cloud (IRDC) linked to DR15, which is known to host active star formation [21], probably induced by the close LBV [9, 10]

  • NIKA2 has opened a new road to explore the physical processes associated with the massive star evolution, improving our knowledge of the LBVs themselves and their circumstellar material (CSM)

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Summary

Background

Luminous Blue Variable (LBV) stars are among the most massive objects, previous to corecollapse supernova (SN). Almost all LBVs are surrounded by IR nebulae, composed by a rich mixture of dust and CNO-processed neutral and ionized gas [4,5,6] This circumstellar material (CSM) is the consequence of ionization, shocks, dust formation and a presumably complex chemistry. Non-thermal emission has been traditionally studied in the radio (cmwavelengths) regime [18], it has been detected in several other massive stars, such as Otype and Wolf-Rayet [19]. This emission is often associated to colliding winds in binaries, where electrons are shocked, accelerated to relativistic velocities and later coupled to an existent magnetic field [20].

Observations
Results
About the emission mechanisms
Concluding remarks
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