Lithium Enrichment–Mass-Loss Connection in K Giant Stars

1996 ◽  
Vol 456 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
R. de la Reza, ◽  
N. A. Drake, ◽  
L. da Silva
2000 ◽  
Vol 198 ◽  
pp. 310-319 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ramiro de la Reza

Lithium continues to be a surprising element and more than ever the study of its creation, destruction and distribution is giving us tools to understand, not only the chemical evolution of this element, but also the nature of mass loss of evolved giants and nucleosynthesis of other elements in cases of very low-metal giants. It also helps to set constraints for cosmological models. The presence of very strong lithium lines in some giant stars of different spectral types and stages of evolution has been considered up to the end of the nineties as a puzzle. To solve this problem, non standard evolutionary mechanisms must be invoked. We review here all the mechanisms presented in the literature and which are divided into internal and external processes of lithium enrichment. We will also discuss the observational tests which are being performed in order to discard (or not) some of them. In any case, the more realistic values of the lithium abundances in giants are, as we will see, the main test of these proposed scenarios. Because of this importance we discuss here the state of art of the Non-LTE determinations of lithium abundances in strong lithium giants. Evolved giants, with lithium abundances larger than that of the interstellar medium and with their important mass losses can be considered the most realistic sources of lithium in the Galaxy. We believe that a complete physical picture of this problem will give a powerful tool to understand the chemical evolution of a large part of all light elements.


2019 ◽  
Vol 14 (S353) ◽  
pp. 16-18
Author(s):  
Deepak ◽  
Bacham E. Reddy

AbstractHere, we explore the enrichment of Lithium in the Galaxy using a large sample of stars common among large spectroscopic surveys such as the GALAH and astrometric survey by the Gaia satellite. For this study we used about 60,000 low mass (M⩽ 2M⊙) dwarfs from the GALAH survey. Further, we discuss Li enrichment among giant stars based on a sample of 52,000 low mass giants, of which 335 are Li-rich with A(Li) ⩾ 1.80 ± 0.14 dex, culled from the GALAH survey. These low mass giants appears to be one of the promising source of Li enrichment in the Galaxy as their atmospheric Li can be added to the ISM through mass loss.


1988 ◽  
Vol 108 ◽  
pp. 158-166
Author(s):  
Takashi Tsuji

AbstractThe origin of mass-loss in cool luminous stars is still obscure; several known mechanisms such as thermally driven wind, radiation-driven wind(via dust), wave-driven wind etc all have serious difficulties, if examined in the light of recent observations. At the same time, recent observations in the infrared and radio spectral domains revealed that outer envelope of red (super)giant stars has highly complicated spatial and velocity structures, while inner envelope may have new component that had not been recognized before. For example, recent high resolution infrared spectroscopy revealed a possible presence of a quasi-static turbulent molecular dissociation zone somewhere in the outer atmosphere. This new component may represent a transition zone between the warm chromosphere and the huge expanding molecular envelope, and may be a cool component of chromospheric inhomogeneity or a moleclar condensation in a cool corona extended by turbulent pressure. Such a result can be regarded as observational evidence in support of a recent theory of autocatalytic molecular formation by thermal instability due to molecular cooling. Thus, observation and theory consistently show the presence of a new component - quasi-static turbulent molecular formation zone - in outer atmosphere of cool luminous stars, and a possibility of a unified understanding of outer atmospheric structure and mass-loss, in which turbulence may play important role, can be proposed.


1984 ◽  
Vol 108 ◽  
pp. 195-206
Author(s):  
Jeremy Mould

Recent observations in both the field and the clusters of the Magellanic Clouds suggest a higher mass loss rate during or at the end of the asymptotic giant branch phase than previously supposed. Recent theoretical investigations offer an explanation for the frequency of carbon stars in the Clouds, but a rich parameter space remains to be explored, before detailed agreement can be expected.


1979 ◽  
Vol 46 ◽  
pp. 163-176
Author(s):  
P. R. Wood

Variability on the red giant branch (RGB) occurs at an interesting and important stage in the life of a star. This phase of evolution is characterized by a substantial amount of mass loss (as a continuous stellar wind or as an abrupt planetary nebula ejection), by flashing of the helium burning shell (at least in stars less massive than ~ 8 M) and by surface enrichment of elements heavier than hydrogen. The galactic importance of these processes is illustrated by the calculations of Cahn and Wyatt (1978) who estimate that material is presently being lost by stars on the RGB at a rate which is roughly equal to the rate at which material is being locked up in stars by star formation. A complementary calculation by Iben and Truran (1978) shows that shell flashing in red giant stars, coupled with mass loss, is a major source of enrichment of the interstellar medium over a wide range of atomic mass from C to heavy s-process elements. Hopefully, studies of the red long period variable (RLPV) stars can assist in the investigation of some of the above processes so that a comprehensive picture of the later phases of stellar evolution can be obtained.


1984 ◽  
Vol 281 ◽  
pp. L37 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. K. Dupree ◽  
L. Hartmann ◽  
E. H. Avrett
Keyword(s):  

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