Interferometric view into RT Pav s long secondary period Binary versus oscillatory convective modes
Journal
Astronomy and Astrophysics
ISSN
0004-6361
Date Issued
2026
Author(s)
Abstract
Context. Long secondary periods (LSPs) occur in roughly one third of evolved stars, yet their origin remains uncertain. Two leading hypotheses are oscillatory convective modes and a binary companion enshrouded in dust. Aims. We investigate the LSP in the red giant RT Pav using multiwavelength interferometry to test these competing hypotheses. Methods. Observations of RT Pav were obtained with the VLTI instruments PIONIER, GRAVITY, and MATISSE spanning 1.5-5.0 mu m, near the expected phase of maximum projected separation under a binary hypothesis. These data were complemented by photometric data and Gaia DR3 astrometry to constrain companion mass, orbital geometry, and photometric amplitude. Monte Carlo simulations evaluated expected interferometric signatures under both scenarios. Parametric models, including uniform-disk, limb-darkened, uniform-ellipse, binary, and oscillatory convective dipole representations, were fitted to squared-visibility and closure-phase data, informing image reconstructions. Results. Gaia constrains any potential companion to a mass whose Roche-lobe volume is smaller than the minimum extent required by the observed photometric modulation, implying that any obscuring or scattering region capable of producing the observed variability would lie beyond the gravitationally bound zone of such a companion. Binary models often return the lowest chi(2)(nu), yet fitted positions are not consistent across wavelength, closure phases do not increase with wavelength as a dusty companion would predict, and we only find significant (> 3 sigma) detections occurring in two of the four tested instrumental wavebands, which is inconsistent with a coherent companion signal. Furthermore simulations and theoretical estimates indicate that a companion with a similar to 1% flux ratio, at LSP-consistent separations should be consistently detectable (near or above our 3 sigma limits) for standard O-rich asymptotic giant branch (AGB) dust via scattering and/or thermal emission, which is not found. Conversely, an oscillatory convective dipole with a similar to 200 K temperature contrast reproduces the H band morphology and the visible light-curve amplitude without violating Gaia or photometric constraints. Finally, significant short wavelength companion signals are completely removed when fitting the residuals of the best fit dipole model. Conclusions. Our interferometric snapshot of RT Pav, acquired near the phase of maximum projected separation under the binary hypothesis, supports oscillatory convective modes as the most physically consistent explanation for its LSP. A logical next step will be time-resolved spectro-interferometric monitoring across the LSP cycle.
