scholarly journals The Evolution of AGB Stars

1992 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
pp. 617-619 ◽  
Author(s):  
P.R. Wood ◽  
E. Vassiliadis

Computations of AGB stellar evolution which include the effects of mass loss are still relatively rare. However, in order to relate numbers of Mira variables, OH/IR stars and carbon stars to associated stellar populations, it is necessary to understand evolutionary timescales on the AGB.The dominant factors controlling very late AGB evolution are shell flashes and mass loss, and some quantitative estimate of the latter is needed for stellar evolution calculations. The favoured mechanism for the production of the large mass loss rates observed in late AGB stars such as OH/IR stars and dust-enshrouded carbon stars, which have mass loss rates up to a few times 10−5 M⊙ yr−1 (see van der Veen and Rugers 1989 for a compilation), is a dual process involving the lévitation of matter above the photosphere by large-amplitude radial pulsation followed by the formation of grains on which radiation pressure acts to drive the circumstellar material away from the star (Castor 1981; Holzer and MacGregor 1985; Hearn 1990). The studies by Wood (1979) and Bowen (1988) show that, by themselves, neither pulsation nor radiation pressure acting on grains can produce the very large mass loss rates from AGB stars.

2019 ◽  
Vol 623 ◽  
pp. A119 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Bladh ◽  
K. Eriksson ◽  
P. Marigo ◽  
S. Liljegren ◽  
B. Aringer

Context. The heavy mass loss observed in evolved stars on the asymptotic giant branch (AGB) is usually attributed to dust-driven winds, but it is still an open question how much AGB stars contribute to the dust production in the interstellar medium, especially at lower metallicities. In the case of C-type AGB stars, where the wind is thought to be driven by radiation pressure on amorphous carbon grains, there should be significant dust production even in metal-poor environments. Carbon stars can manufacture the building blocks needed to form the wind-driving dust species themselves, irrespective of the chemical composition they have, by dredging up carbon from the stellar interior during thermal pulses. Aims. We investigate how the mass loss in carbon stars is affected by a low-metallicity environment, similar to the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds (LMC and SMC). Methods. The atmospheres and winds of C-type AGB stars are modeled with the 1D spherically symmetric radiation-hydrodynamical code Dynamic Atmosphere and Radiation-driven Wind models based on Implicit Numerics (DARWIN). The models include a time-dependent description for nucleation, growth, and evaporation of amorphous carbon grains directly out of the gas phase. To explore the metallicity-dependence of mass loss we calculate model grids at three different chemical abundances (solar, LMC, and SMC). Since carbon may be dredged up during the thermal pulses as AGB stars evolve, we keep the carbon abundance as a free parameter. The models in these three different grids all have a current mass of one solar mass; effective temperatures of 2600, 2800, 3000, or 3200 K; and stellar luminosities equal to logL*∕L⊙ = 3.70, 3.85, or 4.00. Results. The DARWIN models show that mass loss in carbon stars is facilitated by high luminosities, low effective temperatures, and a high carbon excess (C–O) at both solar and subsolar metallicities. Similar combinations of effective temperature, luminosity, and carbon excess produce outflows at both solar and subsolar metallicities. There are no large systematic differences in the mass-loss rates and wind velocities produced by these wind models with respect to metallicity, nor any systematic difference concerning the distribution of grain sizes or how much carbon is condensed into dust. DARWIN models at subsolar metallicity have approximately 15% lower mass-loss rates compared to DARWIN models at solar metallicity with the same stellar parameters and carbon excess. For both solar and subsolar environments typical grain sizes range between 0.1 and 0.5 μm, the degree of condensed carbon varies between 5 and 40%, and the gas-to-dust ratios between 500 and 10 000. Conclusions. C-type AGB stars can contribute to the dust production at subsolar metallicities (down to at least [Fe∕H] = −1) as long as they dredge up sufficient amounts of carbon from the stellar interior. Furthermore, stellar evolution models can use the mass-loss rates calculated from DARWIN models at solar metallicity when modeling the AGB phase at subsolar metallicities if carbon excess is used as the critical abundance parameter instead of the C/O ratio.


2000 ◽  
Vol 177 ◽  
pp. 145-151
Author(s):  
Jacco Th. Van Loon ◽  
Albert A. Zijlstra ◽  
Patricia A. Whitelock ◽  
Cecile Loup ◽  
L.B.F.M. Waters

We show the results of an infrared study of a sample of heavily obscured AGB stars in the LMC. Both carbon-rich and oxygen-rich mass-losing AGB stars can be found at both high and low luminosities, but the percentage of carbon stars decreases with increasing luminosity. The optical depth of the circumstellar envelopes also decreases with increasing luminosity, while the mass-loss rates are (nearly) constant with luminosity. We also show tentative evidence for having found the first post-AGB stars in the LMC.


1995 ◽  
Vol 155 ◽  
pp. 427-428 ◽  
Author(s):  
Albert Zijlstra ◽  
Cecile Loup ◽  
Rens Waters ◽  
Patricia Whitelock ◽  
Francois Guglielmo
Keyword(s):  
Ir Stars ◽  

AbstractWe have carried out a search for obscured AGB stars in the LMC, observing fields in the vicinity of faint IRAS sources. About 25 heavily reddened AGB stars were found, with bolometric magnitudes close to the classical AGB limit of Mbol = −7.1. 10−µm. photometry for 5 sources show that these are oxygen-rich; they are similar to the Galactic OH/IR stars. Mass-loss rates vary between 5×10−4 and 2×10−6 M⊙ yr−1. We find no evidence that the mass-loss rates vary with luminosity. Neither do the mass-loss rates differ in a clear systematic way between the SMC and the LMC. The expansion velocities appear to be slightly lower in the LMC than in the Galaxy. All of the luminous stars for which periods are available have luminosities significantly above the period-luminosity relation derived for optical LMC Miras.


1985 ◽  
Vol 106 ◽  
pp. 131-132
Author(s):  
Dieter Engels

OH/IR stars are the infrared counterparts of galactic OH maser sources which show a characteristic double-peaked emission-line profile. Their strong radio emission can be detected at large distances, making them excellent tracers of distribution and kinematics of evolved stars in the Milky Way. The OH maser profile is typical for line emission from an expanding circumstellar shell. The circumstellar shells of OH/IR stars absorb the optical emission of the central star nearly completely and reemit the energy in the infrared. Having luminosities ~ 105 L⊙ and energy distributions peaking around 10μm, they may make a major contribution to the interstellar radiation field beyond 5μm. With mass loss rates of 10-5 to 10-4 M⊙/yr they lose several solar masses in a few hundred thousand years. OH/IR stars are therefore important objects for recycling stellar matter into the interstellar medium.Progress has been made in understanding the nature of OH/IR stars. They are Mira-like large-amplitude variables with periods up to 5 years long. It is proposed that they are stars of intermediate mass (2–10 M⊙) on the asymptotic giant branch (AGB). They have not only larger masses than Mira variables proper, but also longer periods of pulsation and larger mass loss rates. As a result optically thick circumstellar dust shells are formed, which prevent the detection of these more massive Mira-like variables at optical wavelengths. Radial pulsation (Mira variability) is thus thought to occur for all intermediate-mass stars in the course of their evolution on the AGB. In view of their high mass-loss rates, these stars may be key objects in the study of the formation of planetary nebulae.


1989 ◽  
Vol 106 ◽  
pp. 368-368
Author(s):  
A. Heske ◽  
H.J. Habing ◽  
W.E.C.J. van der Veen ◽  
A. Omont ◽  
T. Forveille

Observations of CO in long period variables have been widely used to determine mass loss rates by applying models for CO line formation (e.g. Knapp and Morris, 1985) which use a simple method to take the impact from infrared radiation into account. Recent 00(2-1) and (1-0) observations of some more evolved OH/IR stars yielded much too low mass loss rates using these simple models, thus indicating that they cannot be extrapolated to far evolved AGB stars with optically thick circumstellar envelopes.


2001 ◽  
Vol 205 ◽  
pp. 282-283
Author(s):  
D.K. Ojha ◽  
A. Omont ◽  
S. Ganesh ◽  
Isogal Team

We report the study of ISOGAL fields in the outer galactic bulge (-1.5° < l < +1.6°, −2.6° < b < + 6.0°, area ∼ 0.42 deg2). We have combined 15 μm and 7 μm ISOCAM observations with 2MASS JHKS data to determine the nature of the sources and the interstellar extinction. Most of the ISOGAL sources show evolution of mass-loss rates in the range 3×10−8 to 1 × 10−6 (M⊙/year). Most of the detected sources are red giants above the RGB tip; a few of them show an excess in J-Ks and Ks-[15] colors. These sources are AGB stars with large mass-loss rates.


1989 ◽  
Vol 131 ◽  
pp. 381-390
Author(s):  
G. R. Knapp

Molecular line observations show that some planetary nebulae are still only partially ionized and are surrounded by the remains of the mass loss envelope shed by the preceding AGB star. The mass loss rates and outflow velocities of these envelopes are similar to those of the cool winds from luminous AGB stars. Both the kinematics of carbon stars and observations of the molecular envelopes around young planetaries show that the carbon star progenitors have a wide range of ages and of mass loss rates. There is increasing evidence that a significant fraction of AGB stars are carbon stars and that these provide a substantial contribution to the total mass returned to the interstellar medium.


2019 ◽  
Vol 55 (2) ◽  
pp. 161-175
Author(s):  
L. Hernández-Cervantes ◽  
B. Pérez-Rendón ◽  
A. Santillán ◽  
G. García-Segura ◽  
C. Rodríguez-Ibarra

In this work, we present models of massive stars between 15 and 23 M⊙ , with enhanced mass loss rates during the red supergiant phase. Our aim is to explore the impact of extreme red supergiant mass-loss on stellar evolution and on their circumstellar medium. We computed a set of numerical experiments, on the evolution of single stars with initial masses of 15, 18, 20 and, 23 M⊙ , and solar composition (Z = 0.014), using the numerical stellar code BEC. From these evolutionary models, we obtained time-dependent stellar wind parameters, that were used explicitly as inner boundary conditions in the hydrodynamical code ZEUS-3D, which simulates the gas dynamics in the circumstellar medium (CSM), thus coupling the stellar evolution to the dynamics of the CSM. We found that stars with extreme mass loss in the RSG phase behave as a larger mass stars.


1989 ◽  
Vol 106 ◽  
pp. 229-231
Author(s):  
R.E. Stencel ◽  
J.E. Pesce ◽  
K.M. MacGregor

AbstractConventional theory explains the origin of carbon stars as due to dredge up of carbon enriched material from the stellar core during helium flash events late in the life of solar mass AGB stars (e.g. Boothroyd and Sackmann 1988). This relatively efficient process however, seems to produce a larger C/O ratio than observed (Lambert et al. 1987). A secondary effect which could contribute to the appearance of carbon stars, is the selective removal of oxygen from the atmosphere by radiative force expulsion of oxygen rich dust grains (e.g. silicates like [Mg, Fe2SiO4]). We present calculations for this scenario which evaluate the degree of momentum coupling between the grains and gas under the thermodynamical conditions of AGB star atmospheres.


1999 ◽  
Vol 191 ◽  
pp. 561-566
Author(s):  
C. Loup ◽  
E. Josselin ◽  
M.-R. Cioni ◽  
H.J. Habing ◽  
J.A.D.L. Blommaert ◽  
...  

We surveyed 0.5 square degrees in the Bar of the LMC with ISOCAM at 4.5 and 12 μm, and with DENIS in the I, J, and Ks bands. Our goal was to build a complete sample of Thermally-Pulsing AGB stars. Here we present the first analysis of 0.14 square degrees. In total we find about 300 TP-AGB stars. Among these TP-AGB stars, 9% are obscured AGB stars (high mass-loss rates); 9 of them were detected by IRAS, and only 1 was previously identified. Their luminosities range from 2 500 to 14 000 L⊙, with a distribution very similar to the one of optical TP-AGB stars (i.e. those with low mass-loss rates). Such a luminosity distribution, as well as the percentage of obscured stars among TP-AGB stars, is in very good agreement with the evolutionary models of Vassiliadis & Wood (1993) if most of the TP-AGB stars that we find have initial masses smaller than 1.5 to 2 M⊙.


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