scholarly journals Improved synthetic TP-AGB models

1999 ◽  
Vol 191 ◽  
pp. 53-58
Author(s):  
P. Marigo

We present recent improvements and results of an extensive analysis of the TP-AGB phase performed by means of a synthetic model (Marigo 1998a, b; Marigo et al. 1998a, b). The improvements concern: i) the use of a homogeneous and accurate set of analytical relations (Wagenhuber & Groenewegen 1998); ii) a new treatment of envelope burning in the most massive TP-AGB stars (M > 3.5M⊙) to account for the possible break-down of the core mass-luminosity relation; iii) a better treatment of the third dredge-up to infer if and when the process takes place.Extensive calculations of synthetic TP-AGB models have been carried out over the mass range (0.8M⊙ ÷ 5M⊙) and for three sets of initial metallicity (Z = 0.019, Z = 0.008, Z = 0.004). The formation of carbon stars is investigated addressing the following issues: a) the reproduction of the observed luminosity functions of carbons stars in both Magellanic Clouds, and b) the formation of very bright and optically obscured carbon stars.

1999 ◽  
Vol 190 ◽  
pp. 370-371
Author(s):  
A. V. Sweigart

We have investigated the possibility that radiation pressure might trigger planetary nebula (PN) ejection during helium-shell flashes in asymptotic-giant-branch (AGB) stars. We find that the outward flux at the base of the hydrogen envelope during a flash will reach the Eddington limit when the envelope mass Menv falls below a critical value that depends on the core mass MH and composition. These results may help to explain the helium-burning PN nuclei found in the Magellanic Clouds.


1993 ◽  
Vol 155 ◽  
pp. 572-572
Author(s):  
C.Y. Zhang

We have selected a sample of planetary nebulae, for which the core masses are determined using distance-independent parameters (Zhang and Kwok 1992). The chemical abundances of He, N, O, and C are taken from the literature for them. Relationships of the ratios of He/H, N/O, and C/O with various stellar parameters of planetary nebulae (PN), such as the core mass, the mass of the core plus the ionized nebular gas, the stellar age and temperature, are examined. It is found that the N/O increases with increasing mass, while the C/O first increases and then decreases with the core mass. No strong correlation seems to exist between the He/H and the core mass. A correlation of the N/O and He/H with the stellar temperature exists. The current dredge-up theory for the progenitor AGB stars cannot satisfactorily account for these patterns of chemical enrichment in PN. Furthermore, the correlations of the N/O and He/H with the stellar age and temperature indicate that besides the dredge-ups in the RG and AGB stages, physical processes that happen in the planetary nebula stage may also play a role in forming the observed patterns of chemical enrichment in the planetary nebulae.


1991 ◽  
Vol 148 ◽  
pp. 363-364
Author(s):  
Neill Reid ◽  
J. R. Mould

Since the pioneering objective prism surveys by Westerlund (1960) and Blanco et al. (1980), the Magellanic Clouds have proved a fruitful site for exploring the evolution of AGB stars. We have used photometric techniques to extend the prism C-star surveys to M- and S-type AGB stars, constructing luminosity functions and obtaining spectra of individual stars for comparison with theoretical predictions. We have concentrated on the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), but we have recently obtained observations of luminous red giants in a region of the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC). In this paper we compare the results from these studies of the two satellite systems.


1984 ◽  
Vol 105 ◽  
pp. 3-19
Author(s):  
Icko Iben

Carbon stars are thought to be in the asymptotic giant branch (AGB) phase of evolution, alternately burning hydrogen and helium in shells above an electron-degenerate carbon-oxygen (CO) core. The excess of carbon relative to oxygen at the surfaces of these stars is thought to be due to convective dredge-up which occurs following a thermal pulse. During a thermal pulse, carbon and neutron-rich isotopes are made in a convective helium-burning zone. In model stars of large CO core mass, the source of neutrons for producing the neutron-rich isotopes is the 22Ne(α, n)25Mg reaction and the isotopes are produced in the solar system s-process distribution. In models of small core mass, the 13C(α, n) 16O reaction is thought to be responsible for the release of neutrons, and the resultant distribution of neutron-rich isotopes is expected to vary considerably from one star to the next, with the distribution in isolated instances possibly resembling the solar system distribution of r-process isotopes. After the dredge-up phase following each pulse, the 13C is made by the reactions 12C(p,γ) 13N(β+ v) 13C in a zone of large 12C abundance and small 1H abundance that has been established by semiconvective mixing during the dredge-up phase. There is qualitative accord between the properties of carbon stars in the Magellanic Clouds and properties of model stars, but considerably more theoretical work is required before a quantitative match is achieved.The observed paucity of AGB stars more luminous than MBOL ∼ −6 is interpreted to mean that the AGB lifetime of a star more luminous than this is at least a factor of ten smaller than the AGB lifetime of stars less luminous than this, or, at most 105 yr. Since, with current estimates of the 22Ne(α, n)25Mg reaction rate R22, only AGB model stars more luminous than MBOL ∼ −6 can produce s-process isotopes in the solar system distribution, it is inferred that either (1) the current estimates of R22 are too small by one to two orders of magnitude, allowing less luminous AGB stars to contribute, (2) the solar system distribution is not equivalent to the average Galactic distribution, being rather the consequence of a unique injection into the protosolar nebula of matter from a massive intermediate-mass AGB star, or (3) the estimates of the temperatures in the convective shell that are given by extant models are too low by, sav, 10 or 15 percent.The absence of carbon stars more luminous than MBOL ∼ −6 is suggested to be due primarily to the fact that ∼ 106 yr of AGB evolution is necessary to produce surface C/O > 1, rather than to be due to the burning of dredged-up carbon into nitrogen at the base of the convective envelope during the interpulse quiescent hydrogen-burning phase. Thus, the positive correlation between the nitrogen and helium abundances in planetary nebulae is perhaps primarily a consequence of the second dredge-up episode rather than a consequence of processes occurring during the thermally pulsing phase.


1999 ◽  
Vol 190 ◽  
pp. 381-382 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ju. Frantsman

The presence of the carbon stars in the MC with luminosities higher or lower than predicted for thermally-pulsing (TP) AGB stars, can be explained by processes that happen during the early AGB (E–AGB) stage. I examine this assumption by means of a population simulation technique. I find that there must be TP–AGB C and S stars in the MC that formed as a result of mass transfer in binary systems. Their presence may influence the age determinations of MC clusters.


1999 ◽  
Vol 191 ◽  
pp. 573-578
Author(s):  
T. Tanabé ◽  
S. Nishida ◽  
Y. Nakada ◽  
T. Onaka ◽  
I. S. Glass ◽  
...  

We performed systematic infrared observations of the intermediate-age Magellanic Clouds clusters NGC 419, NGC 1783 and NGC 1978. Mid-infrared stars discovered in NGC 419 and NGC 1978 are very red and must be undergoing intense mass loss (comparable to superwinds). They are probably carbon stars but do not seem to show any FIR excesses. Three optically visible carbon stars as well as (at least) 2 near-infrared carbon stars observed with ISOPHOT show 60 μm excesses which may indicate mass loss in the past. It seems that the MIR stars are fainter than the AGB tip luminosity and that their Mbols are close to those of the transition luminosity from M type to C stars. Therefore, these MIR stars may not be in the final stage of the AGB phase. This may suggest that AGB stars lose mass heavily at some other time, possibly during the transition from M type to C stars.


2004 ◽  
Vol 193 ◽  
pp. 153-157
Author(s):  
F. Kirschbaum ◽  
B. Heiling ◽  
W. Nowotny ◽  
Ch. Spindler ◽  
H. Olofsson ◽  
...  

AbstractFrom photometric observations out to the tidal radii of the galaxies, we were able to identify hundreds of new carbon stars, to derive mean absolute magnitudes〈Mi〉, luminosity functions, and the spatial/radial distributions of the carbon stars in these galaxies. For each galaxy this new material will allow estimates of the tips of their RGBs to derive distance moduli, to derive C/M ratios of the AGB populations and bolometric magnitudes Mbol. At the end of our survey a comparison of all quantities of the late-type stars as a function of the properties of the host galaxies will be made possible.


2003 ◽  
Vol 20 (4) ◽  
pp. 314-323 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Abia ◽  
I. Domínguez ◽  
R. Gallino ◽  
M. Busso ◽  
O. Straniero ◽  
...  

AbstractRecent advances in the knowledge of the evolutionary status of asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars and of the nucleosynthesis processes occurring in them are discussed, and used to interpret abundance determinations for s-process elements, lithium and CNO isotopes in several types of AGB stars. We focus our attention mainly on carbon-rich AGB stars. By combining these different constraints we conclude that most carbon stars in the solar neighborhood are of low mass (M≤3 M⊙), their abundances being a consequence of the operation of thermal pulses and the third dredge-up. However, the observed abundances in carbon stars of the R and J types cannot be explained by this standard scenario. These stars may not be on the AGB, but possibly in the core-He burning phases; their envelopes may have been polluted with nuclear ashes of the core-He flash, followed by CNO re-processing enhancing 13C. Observational evidence suggesting the operation of non-standard mixing mechanisms during the AGB phase is also discussed.


2015 ◽  
Vol 11 (A29B) ◽  
pp. 446-446
Author(s):  
Carolyn Doherty ◽  
Pilar Gil-Pons ◽  
John Lattanzio ◽  
Lionel Siess

AbstractSuper Asymptotic Giant Branch (Super-AGB) stars reside in the mass range ≈ 6.5-10 M⊙ and bridge the divide between low/intermediate-mass and massive stars. They are characterised by off-centre carbon ignition prior to a thermally pulsing phase which can consist of many tens to even thousands of thermal pulses. With their high luminosities and very large, cool, red stellar envelopes, these stars appear seemingly identical to their slightly more massive red supergiant counterparts. Due to their similarities, super-AGB stars may therefore act as stellar imposters and contaminate red supergiant surveys. The final fate of super-AGB stars is also quite uncertain and depends primarily on the competition between the core growth and mass-loss rates. If the stellar envelope is removed prior to the core reaching ≈ 1.375 M⊙, an O-Ne white dwarf will remain, otherwise the star will undergo an electron-capture supernova (EC-SN) leaving behind a neutron star. We determine the relative fraction of super-AGB stars that end life as either an O-Ne white dwarf or as a neutron star, and provide a mass limit for the lowest mass supernova over a broad range of metallicities from the Z=0.02 to 0.0001.


1989 ◽  
Vol 106 ◽  
pp. 224-224
Author(s):  
Yu. L. Frantsman

Simulated populations of white dwarfs and N type carbon stars were generated for a Salpeter initial mass function and constant stellar birth rate history. The effect of very strong mass loss on the mass distribution of white dwarfs and the luminosity distribution of carbon stars is discussed and the results are compared with observations. A significant mass loss by stars on the TP-AGB occurs besides regular stellar wind and planetary nebulae ejection. Thus it is possible to explain the luminosity functions of carbon and M stars in the Magellanic Clouds (with very few stars brighter than Mbol = -6.0), the very narrow mass distribution of white dwarfs, and the very small number of white dwarfs with M > 1.0 MΘ. The luminosity of some AGB stars in the SMC is so high that they may be supernova of type 1 1/2 precursors. There are no such stars in the LMC. Comparison of the theoretical and observed luminosity distributions of high-luminosity AGB stars in the Magellanic Clouds shows that the mass-loss rate of these stars in the LMC is about an order of magnitude larger than in the SMC. In the Galaxy carbon stars may form only from stars with initial mass less than 1.5 MΘ due to the relatively small initial heavy element abundance in these stars; this is perhaps the main reason for the absence of carbon stars in open clusters in the Galaxy.


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