We present high spectral resolution aperture-synthesis imaging of the red
supergiant Antares (alpha Sco) in individual CO first overtone lines with
VLTI/AMBER. The reconstructed images reveal that the star appears differently
in the blue wing, line center, and red wing and shows an asymmetrically
extended component. The appearance of the star within the CO lines changes
drastically within one year, implying a significant change in the velocity
field in the atmosphere. Our modeling suggests an outer atmosphere (MOLsphere)
extending to 1.2--1.4 stellar radii with CO column densities of
(0.5--1)x10^{20} cm^{-2} and a temperature of ~2000 K. While the velocity field
in 2009 is characterized by strong upwelling motions at 20--30 km/s, it changed
to strong downdrafts in 2010. On the other hand, the AMBER data in the
continuum show only a slight deviation from limb-darkened disks and only
marginal time variations. We derive a limb-darkened disk diameter of
37.38+/-0.06 mas and a power-law-type limb-darkening parameter of
(8.7+/-1.6)x10^{-2} (2009) and 37.31+/-0.09 mas and (1.5+/-0.2)x10^{-1} (2010).
We also obtain Teff = 3660+/-120 K and log L/Lsun = 4.88+/-0.23, which suggests
a mass of 15+/-5 Msun with an age of 11-15 Myr. This age is consistent with the
recently estimated age for the Upper Scorpius OB association. The properties of
the outer atmosphere of Antares are similar to those of another well-studied
red supergiant, Betelgeuse. The density of the extended outer atmosphere of
Antares and Betelgeuse is higher than predicted by the current 3-D convection
simulations by at least six orders of magnitude, implying that convection alone
cannot explain the formation of the extended outer atmosphere.Comment: 18 pages, 16 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysics, short discussion on the age of Antares and the Upper Scorpius
OB association added, movies of the reconstructed images available at
http://www.mpifr-bonn.mpg.de/staff/kohnaka