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The luminous blue variable (LBV) phase is a poorly understood stage in the evolution of high mass stars, characterized for its brevity and instability. The surroundings of LBV stars are excellent test beds to study their dense stellar winds and eruptive mass-loss events. Aiming to improve our knowledge of the LBV phase, we observed the J=1-0 and J=2-1 lines of CO and $^{13}$CO in a field of 1.5x1.5 around the recently identified candidate LBV MGE 042.0787+00.5084, using the IRAM 30-m radio telescope. We report the first detection of molecular emission associated with this source, tracing a structure with an evident circumstellar distribution. Morphology and kinematics of the gas can be explained by an expanding torus, a structure that may have originated from stellar ejecta or the action of stellar winds onto the parent molecular cloud. We derive the physical properties of the gas by means of LTE and non-LTE line modelling, obtaining densities of H$_2$ in the order of 10$^3$ cm$^{-3}$ and kinetic temperatures below 100 K. In addition, we build a kinematic model to reproduce the structure and observed velocity fields of the gas, which is in good agreement with the observations. We estimate a total molecular gas mass of 0.6$pm$0.1 Msun and a dynamical age of 6$times$10$^4$ years, leading to an average mass-loss rate of 0.8-1.2$times$10$^{-5}$ Msun yr$^{-1}$.
Only about 19 Galactic and 25 extra-galactic bona-fide Luminous Blue Variables (LBVs) are known to date. This incomplete census prevents our understanding of this crucial phase of massive star evolution which leads to the formation of heavy binary bl
We present new observations of the nebula around the Magellanic candidate Luminous Blue Variable S61. These comprise high-resolution data acquired with the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA), the Atacama Large Millimetre/Submillimetre Array (AL
We present a comprehensive analysis of 20 years worth of multi-color photometric light curves, multi-epoch optical spectra, and X-ray data of an off-nuclear variable object SDSS1133 in Mrk 177 at $z=0.0079$. The UV-optical light curves reveal that SD
We have mapped 12CO J=3-2 and other molecular lines from the water-fountain bipolar pre-planetary nebula (PPN) IRAS 16342-3814 with ~0.35 resolution using ALMA. We find (i) two very high-speed knotty, jet-like molecular outflows, (ii) a central high-
$eta$~Car is one of the most massive stars in the Galaxy. It underwent a massive eruption in the 19th century, which produced the impressive bipolar Homunculus nebula now surrounding it. The central star is an eccentric binary with a period of 5.54,y