Crystallinity versus mass-loss rate in Asymptotic Giant Branch stars
نویسنده
چکیده
Infrared Space Observatory (ISO) observations have shown that O-rich Asymptotic Giant Branch (AGB) stars exhibit crystalline silicate features in their spectra only if their mass-loss rate is higher than a certain threshold value. Usually, this is interpreted as evidence that crystalline silicates are not present in the dust shells of low mass-loss rate objects. In this study, radiative transfer calculations have been performed to search for an alternative explanation to the lack of crystalline silicate features in the spectrum of low mass-loss rate AGB stars. It is shown that due to a temperature difference between amorphous and crystalline silicates it is possible to include up to 40% of crystalline silicate material in the circumstellar dust shell, without the spectra showing the characteristic spectral features. Since this implies that low mass-loss rate AGB stars might also form crystalline silicates and deposit them into the Interstellar Medium (ISM), the described observational selection effect may put the process of dust formation around AGB stars and the composition of the predominantly amorphous dust in the Interstellar Medium in a different light. Our model calculations result in a diagnostic tool to determine the crystallinity of an AGB star with a known mass-loss rate.
منابع مشابه
Photospheric Opacity and Over-expanded Envelopes of Asymptotic Giant Branch Stars
I suggest that the behavior of the photospheric opacity in oxygen-rich (similar to solar abundance) upper asymptotic giant branch stars may cause these stars to substantially expand for a few thousand years. I term this process overexpansion. This may occur when the photospheric (effective) temperature drops to Tp ∼ 3000 K, and because the opacity sharply increases as temperature further decrea...
متن کاملOpacity-induced over-expansion of asymptotic giant branch stars
I argue that the behavior of the photospheric opacity in oxygen-rich (similar to solar abundance) upper asymptotic giant branch stars may cause these stars to substantially expand for a few thousand years. I term this process over-expansion. This may occur when the photospheric (effective) temperature drops to Tp ∼ 2900 K, and because the opacity sharply increases as temperature decreases down ...
متن کاملPulsating red giant and supergiant stars in the Local Group dwarf galaxy Andromeda I
We have conducted an optical long-term monitoring survey of the majority of dwarf galaxies in the Local Group, with the Isaac Newton Telescope (INT), to identify the long period variable (LPV) stars. LPV stars vary on timescales of months to years, and reach the largest amplitudes of their brightness variations at optical wavelengths, due to the changing temperature. They trace stellar populati...
متن کاملEccentric Orbits of Close Companions to Asymptotic Giant Branch Stars
I propose that the relatively high eccentricity 0.1 ∼< e ∼< 0.4 found in some tidally strongly interacting binary systems, where the mass-losing star is an evolved giant star, e.g., an asymptotic giant branch star, is caused by an enhanced mass loss rate during periastron passages. Tidal interaction by itself will circularize the orbits of these systems in a relatively short time, hence a mecha...
متن کاملMass loss and rotational CO emission from Asymptotic Giant Branch stars
We present submillimeter observations of rotational transitions of carbon monoxide from J = 2 → 1 up to 7 → 6 for a sample of Asymptotic Giant Branch stars and red supergiants. It is the first time that the high transitions J = 6 → 5 and 7 → 6 are included in such a study. With line radiative transfer calculations, we aim to determine the mass-loss history of these stars by fitting the CO line ...
متن کاملذخیره در منابع من
با ذخیره ی این منبع در منابع من، دسترسی به آن را برای استفاده های بعدی آسان تر کنید
عنوان ژورنال:
دوره شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2001