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The surface structure and linib-darkening profile of Betelgeuse
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1997
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We present the first resolved image of a star observed with a separated-element optical aperture synthesis telescope. Observations of the M2 lab supergiant Betelgeuse (a Orionis) were made at 830 nm with the Cambridge Optical Aperture Synthesis Telescope (COAST) during 1995 October. Unusually, the source intensity distribution was highly symmetric at the time of observation -we find no evidence for the brightness asymmetries observed in earlier studies. Our data indicate a strongly limb-darkened but otherwise uniform and circularly symmetric disc, with no compact features contributing any more than 4 per cent of the total flux from the source. The brightness profile is characterized by a very flat core and a Gaussian-like tail, and cannot be represented satisfactorily by a conventional low-order Taylor expansion. A twoparameter Gauss-Hermite polynomial expansion provides a good description for the centreto-limb brightness distribution.