VLTI-GRAVITY measurements of cool evolved stars: II. Pulsation properties and mass-loss process of the Mira star R Car and the red supergiant VX Sgr
Pith reviewed 2026-05-08 14:05 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Long-term observations indicate steady mass loss in Mira stars driven by stable pulsations and episodic mass loss in red supergiants driven by pulsation mode changes.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
The central claim is that the mass-loss process differs between the two types of stars based on their pulsation properties: R Car exhibits stable fundamental-mode pulsation with amplitude 13% of its 280 solar radius photosphere, enabling steady mass loss, whereas VX Sgr with its ~1500 solar radius shows the same amplitude in fundamental mode only during active cycles and switches to low-amplitude first-overtone pulsation in quiescent cycles, during which it experiences an extreme mass-loss event similar to Betelgeuse's with layer expansions and emission lines indicating shocks.
What carries the argument
Time-series VLTI-GRAVITY interferometry measuring variable angular diameters of the photosphere and molecular layers, related to light curves via phase shifts and validated against CO5BOLD simulations.
If this is right
- The mass loss of Mira stars like R Car proceeds at a steady rate linked to their persistent large-amplitude fundamental mode pulsations.
- Red supergiants like VX Sgr experience mass loss primarily through intense, short-lived events that coincide with shifts in their pulsation mode.
- When in the fundamental mode, both Miras and red supergiants can exhibit comparable relative pulsation amplitudes of about 13% of the photospheric radius.
- Extreme events in red supergiants involve the temporary extension of molecular layers to twice the photospheric radius accompanied by shock signatures in emission lines.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- If this pattern holds, stellar evolution models for AGB and RSG phases should treat pulsation mode stability as a key parameter for predicting total mass lost over a star's lifetime.
- Monitoring other red supergiants for mode changes could help predict the timing of their next major mass-loss episodes.
- The similarity in active pulsation amplitudes suggests that the fundamental mode is particularly effective at levitating material in both classes of stars.
Load-bearing premise
The phase shifts between the maxima in radius and the minima in the light curve, together with the measured extensions of the atmospheric layers, are taken to establish the causal mechanism connecting the pulsation mode to the mass-loss process.
What would settle it
A red supergiant observed to undergo an extreme mass-loss event while remaining in a stable fundamental-mode pulsation without mode transition, or a mode transition without an associated mass-loss event.
Figures
read the original abstract
The mass-loss process of red supergiant (RSG) and asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars and its relation to variability is poorly constrained. We study two evolved stars, the Mira-type AGB star R Car and the extreme RSG VX Sgr. Our sample comprises 54 VLTI-GRAVITY snapshots taken over 7 years, being the largest VLTI time-series dataset to date. We determine the angular diameter as a function of time. The radii of the photosphere ($R_{\star}$) and atomic atmospheric layers are variable and relate to the light curve with phase shifts, showing a maximum radius near visual brightness minima. The more extended CO layers show longer, irregular periods and maximum extensions of $\sim 1.3-1.7 \: R_{\star}$ for R Car, and of $\sim 1.5-2.2 \: R_{\star}$ for VX Sgr. Comparison with CO5BOLD simulations revealed a similar behavior. Furthermore, during 2020-2021, VX Sgr exhibited an extreme mass-loss event similar to that of Betelgeuse, preceded by two strong shocks and culminating with the extreme expansion of H$_2$O and CO layers, both up to $\sim 2.2 \: R_{\star}$. During this event, we detected Brackett $\gamma$ and Balmer emission lines, both of which are signatures of a shock propagating through the atmosphere. The Mira R Car showed a photospheric radius $R_{\star} = 280 \pm 25 \: \rm R_\odot$, with a fundamental mode (FM) pulsation amplitude $\sim13 \%$ of $R_{\star} $. During its active cycle, the RSG VX Sgr showed $R_{\star} = 1556 \pm 110 \: \rm R_\odot$ with FM amplitude $ \sim13 \%$ of $R_{\star} $, the same as R Car. During its quiescent cycle, it showed $R_{\star}= 1456 \pm 108 \: \rm R_\odot$ and low-amplitude pulsations near the first overtone, only $\sim4 \%$ of $R_{\star} $. This supports a steady mass loss for Miras related to stable, large-amplitude FM pulsation, whereas the mass-loss process for RSGs may be dominated by extreme events connected to changes in the pulsation mode.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper reports VLTI-GRAVITY interferometric observations of the Mira R Car and RSG VX Sgr across 54 epochs over 7 years. It derives time-variable angular diameters, photospheric radii (R_star = 280 ± 25 R_⊙ for R Car; 1556 ± 110 R_⊙ active and 1456 ± 108 R_⊙ quiescent for VX Sgr), and extensions of CO/H2O layers (up to 1.3–2.2 R_star). Radius maxima occur near light-curve minima with phase shifts; R Car and active VX Sgr show ~13% fundamental-mode (FM) pulsation amplitudes while quiescent VX Sgr shows ~4% first-overtone amplitude. A 2020–2021 extreme expansion event in VX Sgr is described, accompanied by shocks, Brackett-γ and Balmer emission, and layer extensions to ~2.2 R_star, compared to CO5BOLD simulations. The authors conclude that steady mass loss in Miras is linked to stable large-amplitude FM pulsation, whereas RSG mass loss is dominated by extreme events connected to pulsation-mode changes.
Significance. If the interpretive links hold, this supplies the largest VLTI time-series dataset for evolved stars, direct angular-diameter measurements with quoted uncertainties, empirical phase relations between radius and light curves, and the first detailed interferometric view of a Betelgeuse-like event in an RSG. The equal FM amplitudes (~13% of R_star) in the active phases of both stars and the simulation comparisons provide concrete tests for atmospheric models. These data constrain the timing and extent of molecular-layer dynamics even if the causal mapping to mass-loss regimes remains partly interpretive.
major comments (3)
- [Abstract] Abstract: the claim that the observations 'support a steady mass loss for Miras related to stable, large-amplitude FM pulsation, whereas the mass-loss process for RSGs may be dominated by extreme events connected to changes in the pulsation mode' is not backed by direct Ṁ measurements or quantitative comparisons of mass-loss rates between quiescent and active phases; the inference rests on radius variations, one 2020–2021 event, and layer extensions without excluding alternative drivers such as convection or dust nucleation.
- [Abstract] Abstract and conclusions: with only two stars observed, the distinction between 'steady' Mira and 'extreme-event' RSG regimes is based on a single expansion event in VX Sgr; generalization requires explicit discussion of how the observed correlations (phase shifts, 1.3–2.2 R_star extensions) would falsify the interpretation or be produced by other atmospheric processes.
- [Abstract] The reported phase shifts between radius maxima and light-curve minima, together with CO/H2O layer extensions, demonstrate correlation with pulsation but do not establish the causal mechanism linking mode changes to the mass-loss process; no quantitative test (e.g., predicted Ṁ from the observed extensions) is provided to distinguish this from coincidental or multi-driver scenarios.
minor comments (2)
- The abstract mixes observational results with interpretive conclusions; separating the two more explicitly would improve clarity for readers.
- Notation for photospheric radius (R_star) and layer extensions should be defined once in the main text with consistent use of uncertainties.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the constructive and detailed comments. We address each major point below and indicate the revisions planned for the manuscript.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: the claim that the observations 'support a steady mass loss for Miras related to stable, large-amplitude FM pulsation, whereas the mass-loss process for RSGs may be dominated by extreme events connected to changes in the pulsation mode' is not backed by direct Ṁ measurements or quantitative comparisons of mass-loss rates between quiescent and active phases; the inference rests on radius variations, one 2020–2021 event, and layer extensions without excluding alternative drivers such as convection or dust nucleation.
Authors: We acknowledge that the manuscript contains no direct Ṁ measurements and that the mass-loss interpretation is inferential. The abstract claims rest on the time-series correlations between FM pulsation amplitude, radius maxima near light minima, and molecular-layer extensions, together with the match to CO5BOLD simulations and the shock signatures observed during the VX Sgr event. We will revise the abstract to replace 'support' with 'are consistent with' and add an explicit paragraph in the discussion section addressing alternative drivers (convection, dust nucleation) and noting that the data constrain but do not exclude them. revision: partial
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract and conclusions: with only two stars observed, the distinction between 'steady' Mira and 'extreme-event' RSG regimes is based on a single expansion event in VX Sgr; generalization requires explicit discussion of how the observed correlations (phase shifts, 1.3–2.2 R_star extensions) would falsify the interpretation or be produced by other atmospheric processes.
Authors: We agree that the sample size and the reliance on a single extreme event limit generalization. In the revised conclusions we will add a dedicated limitations paragraph that (i) states the distinction is provisional, (ii) outlines how the reported phase shifts and 1.3–2.2 R_star extensions could be falsified (e.g., absence of similar extensions during future mode changes), and (iii) discusses how other atmospheric processes could produce comparable signatures. revision: yes
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Referee: [Abstract] The reported phase shifts between radius maxima and light-curve minima, together with CO/H2O layer extensions, demonstrate correlation with pulsation but do not establish the causal mechanism linking mode changes to the mass-loss process; no quantitative test (e.g., predicted Ṁ from the observed extensions) is provided to distinguish this from coincidental or multi-driver scenarios.
Authors: The phase shifts and extensions are presented as correlations whose timing coincides with light-curve minima and, in VX Sgr, with detected shocks. We will add clarifying text stating that no quantitative Ṁ prediction is derived from the extensions and that the causal link remains interpretive. We will also discuss the possibility of coincidental or multi-driver scenarios and note that a full quantitative test would require hydrodynamic modeling beyond the scope of this observational paper. revision: partial
Circularity Check
Empirical radius and phase measurements from interferometry do not reduce to self-defined or fitted inputs
full rationale
The paper's core results consist of direct determinations of angular diameters versus time from VLTI-GRAVITY visibilities, followed by conversion to physical radii and measurement of phase offsets relative to the light curve. These quantities are extracted from the data rather than predicted from prior fitted parameters within the same equations. The interpretive claim that Mira mass loss is steady and tied to stable FM pulsation while RSG mass loss is event-driven is presented as a qualitative inference from the observed layer extensions and one expansion episode, not as a quantitative prediction that loops back to the input visibilities or fitted radii by construction. No self-citation is invoked as a uniqueness theorem or load-bearing premise for the central distinction, and the comparison to CO5BOLD simulations is external. The derivation chain therefore remains self-contained against external benchmarks.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- standard math Standard VLTI visibility-to-angular-diameter conversion and atmospheric layer identification procedures
Reference graph
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