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Within the Medicina/Effelsberg H2O maser monitoring program we have observed the maser emission of R Crt and RT Vir for more than two decades. To get insight in the distribution and longevity of maser spots in the circumstellar envelopes, we have collected interferometric data, taken in the same period, from the literature. We confirm short-time variations of individual maser features on timescales of months to up to 1.5 years. Also decade-long variations of the general brightness level independent from individual features were seen in both stars. These are due to brightness variations occurring independently from each other in selected velocity ranges, and are independent of the optical lightcurves. Expected drifts in velocity of individual features are usually masked by blending. However, in RT Vir we found an exceptional case of a feature with a constant velocity over 7.5 years (<0.06 km/s/yr). We attribute the long-term brightness variations to the presence of regions with higher-than-average density in the stellar wind, which host several clouds which emit maser radiation on the short time scales. These regions typically need ~20 years to cross the H2O maser shell, where the right conditions to excite H2O masers are present. The constant velocity feature (11 km/s) is likely to come from a single maser cloud, which moved through about half of RT Virs H2O maser shell without changing velocity. From this we infer that its path was located in the outer part of the H2O maser shell, where RT Virs stellar wind apparently has already reached its terminal outflow velocity. This conclusion is corroborated by the observation that the highest H2O maser outflow velocity in RT Vir approaches the terminal outflow velocity as given by OH and CO observations. This is generally not observed in other semi-regular variable stars.
We monitored water-vapor masers around the semi-regular variable star R Crateris with the Japanese VLBI Network (J-Net) at the 22 GHz band during four epochs with intervals of one month. The relative proper motions and Doppler-velocity drifts of twel
We report observations of water masers around the semiregular variable RT Virginis (RT Vir), which have been made with the Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) of the National Radio Astronomy Observatory (NRAO) at five epochs, each separated by three week
Semi-regular variables (SRVs) are similar to Miras in brightness, and they also follow PLRs, though not necessarily the same as Miras. As potential standard candles they are more challenging than Miras due to their smaller variability amplitudes and
High precision Kepler photometry is used to explore the details of AGB light curves. Since AGB variability has a typical time scale on order of a year we discuss at length the removal of long term trends and quarterly changes in Kepler data. Photomet
Asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars play a key role in the enrichment of galaxies with heavy elements. Due to their large amplitude variability, the measurement of elemental abundances is a highly challenging task that has not been solved in a satisf