Abstract

The dust shell around the evolved star HD 179821 has been detected in scattered light in near-IR imaging polarimetry observations. Here, we subtract the contribution of the unpolarized stellar light to obtain an intrinsic linear polarization of between 30 and 40 per cent in the shell which seems to increase with radial offset from the star. The J and K band data are modelled using a scattering code to determine the shell parameters and dust properties. We find that the observations are well described by a spherically symmetric distribution of dust with an inverse square density law, indicating that when mass-loss was occurring, the mass-loss rate was constant. The models predict that the detached nature of a spherically symmetric, optically thin dust shell, with a distinct inner boundary, will only be apparent in polarized flux. This is in accordance with the observations of this and other optically thin circumstellar shells, such as IRAS 17436+5003. By fitting the shell brightness we derive an optical depth to the star which is consistent with V band observations and which, assuming a distance of 6 kpc, gives an inner shell radius of 1.44 X 10^{15} m, a dust number density of 2.70 X 10^{-1} m^{-3}. and a dust mass of 0.08 Msun. We have explored axisymmetric shell models but conclude that any deviations from spherical symmetry in the shell must be slight, with an equator-to-pole density contrast of less than 2:1. We have not been able to simultaneously fit the high linear polarizations and the small (E(J-K)=-0.3) colour excess of the shell and we attribute this to the unusual scattering properties of the dust. We suggest that the dust grains around HD 179821 are either highly elongated or consist of aggregates of smaller particles.

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