scholarly journals The Variability of Critical Mass Loss Rate at Auto-Extinction

Author(s):  
Snorri Már Arnórsson ◽  
Rory M. Hadden ◽  
Angus Law
1979 ◽  
Vol 83 ◽  
pp. 349-356 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. S. P. Dearborn ◽  
J. B. Blake

Many of the effects of mass loss on OB stars have now been explored. Mass loss will cause a star to be overluminous for its mass (though less luminous than a star of its original mass) and, for moderate mass-loss rates, the luminosity decreases at the same rate as the mass contained in the convective core decreases causing the main sequence lifetime to remain unchanged (Chiosi and Nasi 1974, 1978, Deloore, DeGreve and Lamers 1977, Dearborn, Blake, Hainebach and Schramm 1978). Mass loss can also expose layers where 14N has been enhanced via the CNO tricyle (Dearborn and Eggleton 1977) and, in extreme cases, can produce a stripped helium core resembling a Wolf-Rayet Star (Hartwick 1967). While many of these phenomena (in particular the composition change) are more sensitive to the total mass removed than the formalism used to represent the mass loss, significant differences will result for the same average mass-loss rate depending on whether the mass was removed early (near the ZAMS), or late (near core hydrogen depletion). In addition, there appears to be a critical mass loss rate which depends on initial mass and separates those models which continue to evolve in a relatively normal (though subluminous) manner, and those models which evolve to a Wolf-Rayet configuration.


2013 ◽  
Vol 768 (1) ◽  
pp. 47 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. O. Ofek ◽  
L. Lin ◽  
C. Kouveliotou ◽  
G. Younes ◽  
E. Göğüş ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  

2014 ◽  
Vol 664 ◽  
pp. 199-203 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei Guang An ◽  
Lin Jiang ◽  
Jin Hua Sun ◽  
K.M. Liew

An experimental study on downward flame spread over extruded polystyrene (XPS) foam at a high elevation is presented. The flame shape, flame height, mass loss rate and flame spread rate were measured. The influences of width and high altitude were investigated. The flame fronts are approximately horizontal. Both the intensity of flame pulsation and the average flame height increase with the rise of sample width. The flame spread rate first drops and then rises with an increase in width. The average flame height, mass loss rate and flame spread rate at the higher elevation is smaller than that at a low elevation, which demonstrates that the XPS fire risk at the higher elevation area is lower. The experimental results agree well with the theoretical analysis. This work is vital to the fire safety design of building energy conservation system.


1998 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 367-367
Author(s):  
S.D. Van Dyk ◽  
M.J. Montes ◽  
K.W. Weiler ◽  
R.A. Sramek ◽  
N. Panagia

The radio emission from supernovae provides a direct probe of a supernova’s circumstellar environment, which presumably was established by mass-loss episodes in the late stages of the progenitor’s presupernova evolution. The observed synchrotron emission is generated by the SN shock interacting with the relatively high-density circumstellar medium which has been fully ionized and heated by the initial UV/X-ray flash. The study of radio supernovae therefore provides many clues to and constraints on stellar evolution. We will present the recent results on several cases, including SN 1980K, whose recent abrupt decline provides us with a stringent constraint on the progenitor’s initial mass; SN 1993J, for which the profile of the wind matter supports the picture of the progenitor’s evolution in an interacting binary system; and SN 1979C, where a clear change in presupernova mass-loss rate occurred about 104 years before explosion. Other examples, such as SNe 19941 and 1996cb, will also be discussed.


2018 ◽  
Vol 136 ◽  
pp. 18-26 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gianluca Greco ◽  
María Videgain ◽  
Christian Di Stasi ◽  
Belén González ◽  
Joan J. Manyà

1996 ◽  
Vol 174 ◽  
pp. 357-358
Author(s):  
I. Saviane ◽  
G. Piotto ◽  
M. Capaccioli ◽  
F. Fagotto

The bimodal nature of the horizontal branch (HB) of NGC 1851 is known since Stetson (1981). In order to better understand the properties of its HB, we collected a set of data at the ESO-NTT telescope, which provides a full coverage of the cluster area. Additional archive images from the HST-WFPC camera have been used in order to study the central region. The resulting c-m diagram (CMD) for 20500 stars is presented in Fig. 1 (left). Despite its metallicity ([Fe/H]=−1.3), NGC 1851 presents a well defined blue HB tail, besides the expected red clump. The observed CMD has been compared with the synthetic ones. The bimodal HB can be reproduced assuming that there are two stellar populations in the cluster, with an age difference of ∼ 4 Gyr, hypothesis not supported by other properties of the CMD. On the other side, if we assume that the stars in NGC 1851 are 15 Gyr old (as suggested by the difference between the HB and the TO luminosities), only a bimodal mass loss can reproduce the HB morphology: only stars with higher than standard mass loss rate are able to populate the blue-HB (BHB) tail (Fig. 1,left). There are no observational evidences for a bimodal distribution of other parameters (He, CNO, etc.).


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