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Spectral monitoring of the yellow hypergiant $rho$ Cas with the by 6-m telescope of the Special Astrophysical Observatory with a spectral resolution of R$ge$60000 has led to the detection of new features in the kinematic state of its extended atmosphere following the ejection of matter in 2013. Significant changes in the profile of the H$alpha$ line were detected: the line had a doubled core for the first time in a 2014 spectrum, an inverse P Cygni profile on December 13, 2017, and the profile was again doubled on August 6, 2017 and September 5, 2017, but its core was strongly shifted toward longer wavelengths, indicating a rapid infall of matter. Splitting of the profiles of strong, low-excitation absorptions into three components was first detected in 2017. There is no correlation between the evolution of the profiles of H$alpha$ and the splitted absorptions. Pulsation-like variability with an amplitude of about 10 km/s is characteristic only of symmetric weak and moderate-intensity absorption lines. Shell emissions of iron-group elements can be identified in the long-wavelength part of a spectrum obtained in 2013, whose intensity decreased until they completely disappeared in 2017. In the absence of emission in the cores of the H and K lines of CaII, emissions of shell metals are visible in the wings of these lines.
The yellow hypergiant Rho Cassiopeiae (F-G Ia0) has recently become very active with a tremendous outburst event in the fall of 2000. During the event the pulsating supergiant dimmed by more than a visual magnitude, while its effective temperature de
HST/STIS spectra of the small clumps and filaments closest to the central star in VY CMa reveal that the very strong K I emission and TiO and VO molecular emission, long thought to form in a dusty circumstellar shell, actually originate in a few smal
We compare the magnetic helicity in the 17-18 March 2013 interplanetary coronal mass ejection (ICME) flux-rope at 1 AU and in its solar counterpart. The progenitor coronal mass ejection (CME) erupted on 15 March 2013 from NOAA active region 11692 and
Context. The fate of a massive star during the latest stages of its evolution is highly dependent on its mass-loss rate/geometry and therefore knowing the geometry of the circumstellar material close to the star and its surroundings is crucial. Aims.
Context. Large-scale equatorial Rossby modes have been observed on the Sun over the last two solar cycles. Aims. We investigate the impact of the time-varying zonal flows on the frequencies of Rossby modes. Methods. A first-order perturbation theory