Nucleosynthesis, Mass Loss and Stellar Evolution

1969 ◽  
pp. 127-153
Author(s):  
C. de Loore
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
T M Lawlor

Abstract We present stellar evolution calculations from the Asymptotic Giant Branch (AGB) to the Planetary Nebula (PN) phase for models of initial mass 1.2 M⊙ and 2.0 M⊙ that experience a Late Thermal Pulse (LTP), a helium shell flash that occurs following the AGB and causes a rapid looping evolution between the AGB and PN phase. We use these models to make comparisons to the central star of the Stingray Nebula, V839 Ara (SAO 244567). The central star has been observed to be rapidly evolving (heating) over the last 50 to 60 years and rapidly dimming over the past 20–30 years. It has been reported to belong to the youngest known planetary nebula, now rapidly fading in brightness. In this paper we show that the observed timescales, sudden dimming, and increasing Log(g), can all be explained by LTP models of a specific variety. We provide a possible explanation for the nebular ionization, the 1980’s sudden mass loss episode, the sudden decline in mass loss, and the nebular recombination and fading.


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.


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.


1999 ◽  
Vol 191 ◽  
pp. 389-394
Author(s):  
K.-P. Schröder ◽  
J.M. Winters ◽  
E. Sedlmayr

We have computed mass-loss histories and tip-AGB stellar evolution models in the presence of a dust-induced, carbon-rich “superwind”, in the initial mass-range of 1.1 to about 2.5 solar masses and for nearly solar composition (X=0.28, Y=0.70, Z=0.02). Consistent, actual mass-loss rates are used in each time-step, based on pulsating and “dust-driven” stellar wind models for carbon-rich stars (Fleischer et al. 1992) which include a detailed treatment of dust-formation, radiative transfer and wind acceleration. Our tip-AGB mass-loss rates reach about 4 · 10−5M⊙yr−1 and become an influencial factor of stellar evolution.Heavy outflows of 0.3 to 0.6 M⊙ within only 2 to 3·104 yrs, exactly as required for PN-formation, occur with tip-AGB models of an initial stellar mass Mi ≳ 1.3M⊙. The mass-loss of our “superwind” varies strongly with effective temperature (Ṁ ∝ T−8eff, see Arndt et al. 1997), reflecting the temperature-sensitive micro-physics and chemistry of dust-formation and radiative transfer on a macroscopic scale. Furthermore, a thermal pulse leads to a very short (100 to 200 yrs) interruption of the “superwind” of these models.For Mi ≲ 1.1M⊙, our evolution models fail to reach the (Eddington-like) critical luminosity Lc required by the radiatively driven wind models, while for the (initial) mass-range in-between, with the tip-AGB luminosity LtAGB near Lc, thermal pulses drive bursts of “superwind”, which could explain the outer shells found with some PN's. In particular, a burst with a duration of only 800 yrs and a mass-loss of about 0.03 M⊙, occurs right after the last AGB thermal pulse of a model with Mi ≈ 1.1M⊙. There is excellent agreement with the thin CO shells found by Olofsson et al. (e.g., 1990, 1998) around some Mira stars.


2019 ◽  
Vol 627 ◽  
pp. A151 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Shenar ◽  
D. P. Sablowski ◽  
R. Hainich ◽  
H. Todt ◽  
A. F. J. Moffat ◽  
...  

Context. Massive Wolf–Rayet (WR) stars dominate the radiative and mechanical energy budget of galaxies and probe a critical phase in the evolution of massive stars prior to core collapse. It is not known whether core He-burning WR stars (classical WR; cWR) form predominantly through wind stripping (w-WR) or binary stripping (b-WR). Whereas spectroscopy of WR binaries has so-far largely been avoided because of its complexity, our study focuses on the 44 WR binaries and binary candidates of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC; metallicity Z ≈ 0.5 Z⊙), which were identified on the basis of radial velocity variations, composite spectra, or high X-ray luminosities. Aims. Relying on a diverse spectroscopic database, we aim to derive the physical and orbital parameters of our targets, confronting evolution models of evolved massive stars at subsolar metallicity and constraining the impact of binary interaction in forming these stars. Methods. Spectroscopy was performed using the Potsdam Wolf–Rayet (PoWR) code and cross-correlation techniques. Disentanglement was performed using the code Spectangular or the shift-and-add algorithm. Evolutionary status was interpreted using the Binary Population and Spectral Synthesis (BPASS) code, exploring binary interaction and chemically homogeneous evolution. Results. Among our sample, 28/44 objects show composite spectra and are analyzed as such. An additional five targets show periodically moving WR primaries but no detected companions (SB1); two (BAT99 99 and 112) are potential WR + compact-object candidates owing to their high X-ray luminosities. We cannot confirm the binary nature of the remaining 11 candidates. About two-thirds of the WN components in binaries are identified as cWR, and one-third as hydrogen-burning WR stars. We establish metallicity-dependent mass-loss recipes, which broadly agree with those recently derived for single WN stars, and in which so-called WN3/O3 stars are clear outliers. We estimate that 45  ±  30% of the cWR stars in our sample have interacted with a companion via mass transfer. However, only ≈12  ±  7% of the cWR stars in our sample naively appear to have formed purely owing to stripping via a companion (12% b-WR). Assuming that apparently single WR stars truly formed as single stars, this comprises ≈4% of the whole LMC WN population, which is about ten times less than expected. No obvious differences in the properties of single and binary WN stars, whose luminosities extend down to log L ≈ 5.2 [L⊙], are apparent. With the exception of a few systems (BAT99 19, 49, and 103), the equatorial rotational velocities of the OB-type companions are moderate (veq ≲ 250 km s−1) and challenge standard formalisms of angular-momentum accretion. For most objects, chemically homogeneous evolution can be rejected for the secondary, but not for the WR progenitor. Conclusions. No obvious dichotomy in the locations of apparently single and binary WN stars on the Hertzsprung-Russell diagram is apparent. According to commonly used stellar evolution models (BPASS, Geneva), most apparently single WN stars could not have formed as single stars, implying that they were stripped by an undetected companion. Otherwise, it must follow that pre-WR mass-loss/mixing (e.g., during the red supergiant phase) are strongly underestimated in standard stellar evolution models.


1982 ◽  
Vol 98 ◽  
pp. 377-385 ◽  
Author(s):  
Theodore P. Snow

Resonance-line profiles of SiIII and SiIV lines in 22 B and Be stars have been analyzed in the derivation of mass-loss rates. Of the 19 known Be or shell stars in the sample group, all but one show evidence of winds. It is argued that for stars of spectral type B1.5 and later, SiIII and SiIV are the dominant stages of ionization, and this conclusion, together with theoretical fits to the line profiles, leads to mass-loss rates between 10-11 and 3 × 10-9 for the stars. The rate of mass loss does not correlate simply with stellar parameters, and probably is variable with time. The narrow FeIII shell lines often seen in the ultraviolet spectra of Be stars may arise at low levels in the wind, below the strong acceleration zone. The mass-loss rates from Be stars are apparently insufficient to affect stellar evolution.


Galaxies ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (3) ◽  
pp. 89
Author(s):  
Efrat Sabach

We study the effects of a reduced mass-loss rate on the evolution of low metallicity Jsolated stars, following our earlier classification for angular momentum (J) isolated stars. By using the stellar evolution code MESA we study the evolution with different mass-loss rate efficiencies for stars with low metallicities of Z = 0 . 001 and Z = 0 . 004 , and compare with the evolution with solar metallicity, Z = 0 . 02 . We further study the possibility for late asymptomatic giant branch (AGB)—planet interaction and its possible effects on the properties of the planetary nebula (PN). We find for all metallicities that only with a reduced mass-loss rate an interaction with a low mass companion might take place during the AGB phase of the star. The interaction will most likely shape an elliptical PN. The maximum post-AGB luminosities obtained, both for solar metallicity and low metallicities, reach high values corresponding to the enigmatic finding of the PN luminosity function.


1993 ◽  
Vol 137 ◽  
pp. 410-425 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Noels ◽  
N. Grevesse

AbstractWe present the standard models for small and intermediate main sequence stars and we discuss some of the problems arising with semiconvection and overshooting. The surface abundance of Li serves as a test for other physical mechanisms, including microscopic and turbulent diffusion, rotation and mass loss.


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