Peremennye Zvezdy

Peremennye Zvezdy (Variable Stars) 45, No. 15, 2025

Received 28 October; accepted 6 November.

Article in PDF

DOI: 10.24412/2221-0474-2025-45-154-162

Near-infrared Photometry and Dust Envelope Modeling of the Hot Variable Post-AGB Star IRAS 21546+4721

N. P. Ikonnikova, M. A. Burlak, B. S. Safonov

Sternberg Astronomical Institute, Lomonosov Moscow State University, Universitetskij pr. 13, Moscow 119234, Russia


We present an analysis of new infrared photometric data in bands for the poorly studied hot variable post-AGB star IRAS 21546+4721. The observations were carried out with the 2.5-m telescope at the Caucasian Mountain Observatory of the Sternberg Astronomical Institute, Lomonosov Moscow State University during 2021-2022. We detected brightness variations with a maximum amplitude of 03 in all bands, as well as discrepancies between our average magnitudes and those from the 2MASS catalog. We constructed the spectral energy distribution of the object in the wavelength range 0.36-0.60 m and calculated a model of the circumstellar dust shell. Our model consists of three components, formed by isotropic wind and superwind at the AGB stage, as well as during the post-AGB phase.

1. Introduction

Post-AGB objects are stars in the final stage of their evolution after the asymptotic giant branch (AGB) phase. They represent an intermediate stage between the AGB phase and the white dwarf stage. After the superwind phase ceases at the tip of the AGB, the star possesses a CO core with a mass of 0.5-0.8 , surrounded with an extensive gaseous envelope that mimics characteristics (luminosity, surface gravity) of a supergiant. The object is also enveloped with a dust shell, which becomes more transparent as it expands. The star gradually contracts, its temperature rises, and at  K, ionization of the surrounding envelope begins, leading to the appearance of a low-excitation emission spectrum from the nebula.

IRAS 21546+4721 ( , , 2000) is a hot post-AGB star in the early stage of planetary nebula formation. Its spectrum exhibits both stellar absorption lines and emission lines from the surrounding gaseous envelope (Suárez et al. 2006; Ikonnikova et al. 2025). The presence of a dust envelope is evidenced by infrared emission (Manchado et al. 1989; Venkata Raman et al. 2017). Recently, we detected rapid, night-to-night, non-periodic optical variations with an amplitude of approximately 03 in all bands, as well as either a reddening of the index during phases of increased brightness or the absence of a statistically significant correlation between color indices and brightness (Ikonnikova et al. 2025).

This paper presents near-infrared (NIR) photometric observations of the star in the bands. We construct its spectral energy distribution and derive physical parameters of the dust envelope.

2. Observations and reductions

Our photometry was obtained in 2021-2022 with the ASTROnomical Near-InfraRed CAMera (ASTRONIRCAM) (Nadjip et al. 2017) mounted on the 2.5-m telescope of the Caucasian Mountain Observatory of the Sternberg Astronomical Institute, Lomonosov Moscow University. The observations were carried out in dithering mode to acquire images in the bands of the Mauna Kea Observatories Near-Infrared (MKO-NIR) system (Simons and Tokunaga 2002). Each frame was automatically reduced and calibrated using the pipeline described in detail by Tatarnikov et al. (2023). The standard reduction procedures included correction for non-linearity, bad pixels, and dark subtraction. Flat-fielding and background subtraction were performed using custom Python scripts. Instrumental magnitudes for the target star were derived using differential aperture photometry relative to a primary reference star. Two additional nearby stars were used to monitor the photometric stability of the reference star (Table 1). The 2MASS magnitudes of these comparison stars were transformed to the MKO-NIR system using the equations from Leggett et al. (2006). The -band magnitudes were estimated from the 2MASS and magnitudes using the transformation equations derived in Tatarnikov et al. (2023). For each filter and pointing, multiple frames were obtained; the reported magnitudes are based on the mean of these measurements, and the uncertainties were calculated as the standard deviation of individual values. The average photometric uncertainties are: , , , . Ten individual -band brightness measurements of the star are listed in Table 2. Photometry in the bands is provided in both the MKO-NIR and 2MASS systems in Table 3.

Table 1. Comparison stars for photometry

Star 2MASS ID
(2MASS) (2MASS) (2MASS) (MKO) (MKO) (MKO) (MKO)
Ref 21562991+4735448 12.799 12.115 11.992 13.182 12.744 12.107 11.969
St1 21562738+4734468 11.913 11.267 11.162 12.276 11.862 11.258 11.140
St2 21562914+4736532 12.627 12.101 11.993 12.927 12.584 12.092 11.974


Table 2. photometry of IRAS 21546+4721 in 2021-2022

JD-2400000 (MKO)
59535.288 13.243
59541.402 13.342
59544.270 13.408
59563.279 13.438
59579.171 13.447
59586.256 13.403
59589.269 13.451
59621.191 13.493
59831.362 13.356
59914.361 13.417

3. Data analysis

Figure 1 shows the light curves of IRAS 21546+4721 in the  bands, along with the -band light curve from Ikonnikova et al. (2025). Although the vertical scale in the plot makes the variations appear small, the star actually varies in brightness with amplitudes up to 03 in all bands.

Although no systematic NIR monitoring of hot post-AGB stars has been conducted to date - with only individual brightness estimates available, - optical variability has been detected for 17 such objects, as listed in Ikonnikova et al. (2025). It is characterized by irregular fluctuations with maximum amplitudes of 02-04, typical timescales ranging from a fraction of a day to several days, and no detectable periodicity.

Table 3. photometry of IRAS 21546+4721 in 2021-2022

JD
(MKO) MKO (MKO) (2MASS) (2MASS) (2MASS)
59535.283 12.966 12.314 11.390 13.085 12.283 11.464
59541.407 13.044 12.373 11.397 13.168 12.339 11.474
59544.268 13.089 12.415 11.400 13.217 12.379 11.480
59552.260 13.039 12.397 11.370 13.165 12.361 11.451
59560.346 13.118 12.408 11.393 13.249 12.372 11.473
59561.258 13.150 12.444 11.421 13.281 12.408 11.502
59562.277 13.137 12.407 11.387 13.270 12.371 11.467
59563.277 13.115 12.427 11.401 13.245 12.391 11.482
59579.167 13.068 12.425 11.401 13.194 12.389 11.482
59586.250 13.086 12.369 11.305 13.221 12.331 11.389
59589.264 13.126 12.407 11.399 13.257 12.372 11.479
59597.184 13.084 12.402 11.406 13.211 12.367 11.485
59610.173 13.097 12.395 11.374 13.227 12.359 11.454
59621.199 13.149 12.422 11.315 13.288 12.382 11.402
59694.511 13.093 12.417 11.429 13.219 12.383 11.507
59730.498 13.193 12.486 11.477 13.323 12.451 11.557
59731.524 13.138 12.451 11.418 13.268 12.414 11.499
59736.492 13.143 12.458 11.446 13.271 12.422 11.526
59750.517 12.999 12.338 11.403 13.119 12.306 11.477
59763.387 13.089 12.391 11.420 13.215 12.357 11.497
59767.342 13.082 12.395 11.406 13.209 12.361 11.484
59806.425 13.129 12.445 11.457 13.255 12.411 11.535
59815.481 13.123 12.451 11.445 13.250 12.416 11.524
59821.542 13.177 12.475 11.474 13.306 12.440 11.553
59823.429 13.136 12.434 11.446 13.264 12.400 11.524
59831.351 13.064 12.397 11.354 13.193 12.360 11.436
59831.540 13.060 12.381 11.369 13.188 12.345 11.449
59838.407 13.094 12.389 11.316 13.229 12.350 11.400
59839.353 13.045 12.370 11.373 13.171 12.335 11.452
59840.437 13.134 12.423 11.372 13.267 12.386 11.455
59841.498 13.034 12.371 11.342 13.162 12.335 11.423
59843.252 12.957 12.314 11.414 13.073 12.284 11.486
59850.281 13.115 12.430 11.322 13.251 12.390 11.409
59891.428 13.075 12.401 11.413 13.201 12.367 11.491
59901.315 12.986 12.351 11.379 13.107 12.317 11.456
59904.349 13.152 12.440 11.390 13.285 12.403 11.473
59907.310 13.204 12.482 11.430 13.338 12.444 11.513
59914.353 13.113 12.429 11.426 13.241 12.394 11.505
59920.353 13.225 12.489 11.449 13.360 12.452 11.531
59924.185 13.131 12.434 11.414 13.261 12.398 11.494
59928.327 13.101 12.350 11.246 13.242 12.310 11.332
59930.291 13.035 12.368 11.344 13.163 12.332 11.425
59938.224 13.120 12.439 11.447 13.246 12.404 11.525
59945.176 13.081 12.379 11.384 13.209 12.344 11.463

There is still no consensus on the physical mechanisms driving the variability of hot post-AGB stars. The primary hypotheses under consideration attribute it to an unsteady stellar wind and pulsations (Handler 1999). It is possible that both processes contribute: the gradual brightness changes may be caused by variations in the mass loss rate, while the short-term fluctuations are most likely due to pulsations. The detection of pulsation periods probably requires better time-resolution observations.

Fig. 1. Light curves of IRAS 21546+4721 in the bands, along with the -band light curve from Ikonnikova et al. (2025). The average photometric uncertainty is smaller than the symbol size.

Table 4 presents NIR () photometric data from the literature together with our averaged values. The data from García-Lario et al. (1997) and the 2MASS catalogue include formal measurement uncertainties. In contrast, our values represent mean magnitudes over the entire observational series, uncertainties given as the root-mean-square (RMS) deviations, which reflect the object's intrinsic variability. The RMS uncertainties of our measurements are comparable to the photometric errors quoted in the 2MASS catalog.

The study by García-Lario et al. (1997) provides brightness estimates for two observational epochs, which show slight discrepancies. While this may hint at intrinsic variability, the data are affected by substantial measurement uncertainties. Notably, the García-Lario et al. (1997) values differ substantially from the 2MASS data - even when accounting for their large error bars, - most likely due to differences between the photometric systems of the instruments used. In contrast, a comparison of our data with the 2MASS results (which are tied to the same MKO-NIR photometric system after transformation) reveals discrepancies that can be attributed to the object's genuine variability.

Table 4. photometric data for IRAS 21546+4721 from different sources

Epoch Source
13.1 12.340.11 11.410.07 1990-06-19-1990-06-25 García-Lario et al., 1997
12.90.3 12.290.09 11.290.09 1993-12-01-1993-12-07 García-Lario et al., 1997
13.1850.029 12.5150.037 11.5470.028 1999-11-19 Cutri et al., 2003
13.2280.061 12.3700.044 11.4700.053 2021-2022 our data

Figure 2 shows a () vs. () color-color diagram, where a clear difference is seen between the 2MASS data and our modern measurements. An anomaly is observed: the () color index has become bluer, while the () index has turned redder. If the long-term variability were due to dust-shell evolution, both indices would have shifted coherently - either redward with increasing optical depth or blueward with decreasing optical depth. A similar coherent trend would be expected for changes in stellar temperature: decreasing temperature would cause both color indices ( and ) to shift redward, increasing temperature would lead to a blueward shift. For post-AGB stars, theory predicts a monotonic rise in temperature over time. The observed opposing trends in the color indices currently lack a definitive explanation.

Fig. 2. NIR color-color diagram ( vs. ). The gray dots represent individual photometric measurements. The red point with error bars shows the average value and its RMS standard deviation. The blue symbol denotes the data from the 2MASS catalog with its associated photometric uncertainties.

4. The model of the circumstellar dust envelope

The star exhibits a significant infrared excess due to the presence of a circumstellar dust shell. Our goal was to model the star's SED across a broad wavelength range (from 0.3 to 60 m) and to determine parameters of the dust shell.

We employ numerical Monte Carlo Radiative Transfer (MCRT) calculations using the RADMC-3D software (Dullemond et al. 2012) as our model. This code simulates the emission, propagation, scattering, and absorption of individual photon packets. It accounts for wavelength-dependent absorption coefficients and angle-dependent scattering matrices. Thermal equilibrium is maintained following the approach of Bjorkman & Wood (2001). Escaping photons are recorded, and their properties are used to construct the SED. Interpretation of observational data for this study was performed using webMCRT1 - a web-based interface to RADMC3D. Relevant model links are provided throughout the text for reference.

Our modeling is based on our data, which represent averaged values obtained from our observations with the RC600 telescope between 2020 and 2024, as published in Ikonnikova et al. (2025) and our data (Table 5) as well as the data available from different catalogues listed in Table 6. For absolute calibrations, we adopted the following sources: for bands, Straizys (1992); for bands, Bessell (1979); for bands, Koornneef (1983).

Table 5. photometry


Band
Wavelength, Å Magnitude
0.36 13.69 0.07
0.44 14.40 0.06
0.55 14.18 0.06
0.64 13.85 0.05
0.79 13.74 0.06
1.03 13.40 0.07
1.25 13.23 0.06
1.62 12.37 0.04
2.2 11.47 0.05

Table 6. Infrared survey data used for SED modeling


Telescope Wavelength (m) Flux (Jy) Obs. time Reference
IRAS 12, 25, 60 0.766, 3.04, 1.12 1983 Helou & Walker (1988)
Spitzer 5.21-37.86 spectrum 2008-12-15 Houck et al. (2004)
WISE 3.35, 4.6, 11.6, 22.1 0.033, 0.046, 0.609, 2.547 2010 Cutri et al. (2013)
AKARI PSC 9, 18 0.367, 1.764 2006-2007 Murakami et al. (2007)

The observed SED has a shape that cannot be reproduced using a single envelope described by a simple density distribution law of the form . Therefore, we defined the envelope as three nested layers, fixing the power-law index in each layer. This assumes that the envelope was formed through several episodes of mass loss, each occurring at a constant mass loss rate.

In accordance with the principle of parsimony, our subsequent modeling employed a three-shell composite dust envelope. This model was built upon the following foundational assumptions:

IRAS 21546+4721 is classified as a carbon-rich object. This is determined by the presence of fullerenes (C) and other carbon compounds, such as polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), which have been detected in its spectra. In particular, the identification of vibrational modes of C fullerene indicates carbonaceous features in the star's circumstellar environment (Venkata Raman et al. 2017). To minimize ambiguity in the absence of specific compositional data, the dust was modeled as amorphous carbon, using the optical constants from Suh (2000).

Table 7 lists the parameters of the shell components, including the inner and outer radii, dust grain radius, optical depth, and dust masses. Figure 3 represents the best-fitting model SED with minimal normalized deviations from the observed data. The components of the dust shell are numbered in Table 7 and Fig. 3 in order of increasing distance from the star. The most massive and most distant shell (3) was formed during the AGB phase as a result of mass loss from thermal pulses. The other two shells, (1) and (2), formed later in the post-AGB phase. It is likely that the innermost shell (1) is still being replenished with material. This is because, as the star's temperature increases during the post-AGB stage, its stellar wind intensifies.

Table 7. Parameters of the model dust envelope components


No
(1) (2) (3)

Inner edge, au
5 10 1500
Outer boundary, au 100 500 15000
Dust grain radius, m Min 0.1, Max 1.0
Optical depth, 0.01 0.03 0.5
Dust mass,

Fig. 3. The SED of IRAS 21546+4721. The red curve represents the resulting fit corresponding to the model described in the text. The symbols depict the observational data points. For some data the error bars are smaller than the size of the symbols. The orange dashed curves depict the model spectra of three dust shells. The numbering corresponds to that in Table 7.

The observed SED is reasonably well described by our model, with the exception of the 5-10 micron wavelength range. Here, the model fails to reproduce the strong PAH bands seen in the observed spectrum, as it is limited to simulating the continuum.

The study by Venkata Raman et al. (2017) presented Spitzer mid-IR spectra for a large sample of post-AGB stars, including IRAS 21546+4721. Based on the presence of PAH features at 6.2, 7.7, and 11.2 m in its spectrum, this star was classified as a PAH-type object. Furthermore, its SED was modeled using the DUSTY software (Ivezic et al. 1999). The dust grains in the model were composed of graphite (Gr). The stellar temperature was adopted as 10,000 K, although more recent data indicate that the star is significantly hotter, at approximately 24,000 K (Ikonnikova et al. 2025). The resulting model consists of two spherically symmetric shells. A density distribution falling off as was used for both shells. It is assumed that PAHs and dust exist in two separate shells, with the PAHs located closer to the star than the dust grains.

5. Conclusions

We present the results of our NIR photometric monitoring of the hot post-AGB star IRAS 21546+4721, conducted in the bands during 2021-2022 with the 2.5-m telescope of the Caucasian Mountain Observatory. The main results of our study are as follows:

(1) The star exhibits non-periodic brightness variations with amplitudes up to 03 in all NIR bands, consistent with the behavior previously observed in the optical domain. This confirms that IRAS 21546+4721 is a rapidly variable hot post-AGB star.

(2) A comparison of our NIR data to earlier 2MASS measurements reveals significant long-term changes in the color indices: the color has become bluer, while the color has reddened. This opposing behavior cannot be explained by simple changes in the dust optical depth or stellar temperature alone and remains unexplained.

(3) The SED of the star from 0.35 to 60 m was successfully modeled using a three-component dusty envelope with a power-law density distribution ( ). The model assumes amorphous carbon dust, consistent with the carbon-rich nature of the object, and reproduces the observed IR excess.

(4) The best-fitting model consists of three nested shells with inner radii of 5, 10, and 1500 au, and outer radii of 100, 500, and 15000 au, respectively. This multi-layered structure suggests multiple episodes of mass loss during the star's evolution.

In summary, IRAS 21546+4721 represents an important laboratory for studying the late stages of stellar evolution, the dynamics of circumstellar envelopes, and the onset of planetary nebula formation.


Acknowledgments: We are especially grateful to the CMO staff for maintaining the equipment and helping in observations. The work of N.P. Ikonnikova (data analysis and article writing) and B.S. Safonov (dust shell modeling) was supported by the RSF grant 23-12-00092.

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