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The spectrometers onboard the Infrared Telescope in Space (IRTS) reveal water vapor absorption in early M-type stars, as early as M2. Previous observations detected H_2O vapor absorption only in stars later than M6, with the exception of the recent detection of H_2O in beta Peg (M2.5 II-III). In our sample of 108 stars, 67 stars have spectral types earlier than M6. The spectral types are established by means of their near-infrared colors on a statistical basis. Among the 67 stars of spectral types earlier than M6, we find water vapor absorption in six stars. The observed absorption features are interpreted using a local thermodynamic equilibrium model. The features are reasonably fitted by model spectra with excitation temperatures of 1000-1500 K and water column densities of 5x10^19 to 1x10^20 cm^-2. These numbers imply that the H_2O molecules are present in a region of the atmosphere, located above the photosphere. Furthermore, our analysis shows a good correlation between the H_2O absorption band strength, and the mid-infrared excess due to the circumstellar dust. We discuss the relation between the outer atmosphere and the mass loss.
Time-variable absorption by water vapor in Earths atmosphere presents an important source of systematic error for a wide range of ground-based astronomical measurements, particularly at near-infrared wavelengths. We present results from the first stu
Using 2D models of rotating stars, the interferometric measurements of alpha Eri and its fundamental parameters corrected for gravitational darkening effects we infer that the star might have a core rotating 2.7 times faster than the surface. We expl
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Ice-water, water-vapor interfaces and ice surface are studied by molecular dynamics simulations with the SPC/E model of water molecules having the purpose to estimate the profiles of electrostatic potential across the interfaces. We have proposed a m
We argue that the presence of water vapor in the circumstellar outflow of a carbon-rich AGB star is potentially a distinctive signature of extra-solar cometary systems. Detailed models show that at suitable distances from the star, water ice can surv