49,171 research outputs found
The pulsation modes, masses and evolution of luminous red giants
The period-luminosity sequences and the multiple periods of luminous red
giant stars are examined using the OGLE III catalogue of long-period variables
in the Large Magellanic Cloud. It is shown that the period ratios in individual
multimode stars are systematically different from the ratios of the periods at
a given luminosity of different period-luminosity sequences. This leads to the
conclusion that the masses of stars at the same luminosity on the different
period-luminosity sequences are different. An evolutionary scenario is used to
show that the masses of stars on adjacent sequences differ by about 16-26% at a
given luminosity, with the shorter period sequence being more massive. The mass
is also shown to vary across each sequence by a similar percentage, with the
mass increasing to shorter periods. On one sequence, sequence B, the mass
distribution is shown to be bimodal. It is shown that the small amplitude
variables on sequences A', A and B pulsate in radial and nonradial modes of
angular degree l=0, 1 and 2, with the l=1 mode being the most common. The stars
on sequences C' and C are predominantly radial pulsators (l=0). Matching period
ratios to pulsation models shows that the radial pulsation modes associated
with sequences A', A, B, C' and C are the 4th, 3rd, 2nd and 1st overtones and
the fundamental mode, respectively.Comment: 16 pages, 10 figures, 1 tabl
Pulsation and mass loss in Mira variables
The behavior of pulsation in the outer layers of a typical Mira variable was studied in the adiabatic and isothermal limits. A shock wave propagates outward once per period and the radial velocity obtained from observations of hydrogen emission lines is identified with the velocity of gas in the post shock region. In the adiabatic case, mass loss in the form of a steady stellar wind was produced. In the isothermal case, no continuous mass loss was produced but occasional ejection of shells occur. Pulsation introduced into a star undergoing steady mass loss as a result of radiation pressure acting on grains caused the mass loss rate to increase by a factor of approximately 40, while the terminal velocity of the flow was almost unaltered
The AGB stars of the intermediate-age LMC cluster NGC 1846 Variability and age determination
Aims: To investigate variability and to model the pulsational behaviour of
AGB variables in the intermediate-age LMC cluster NGC 1846.
Methods: Our own photometric monitoring has been combined with data from the
MACHO archive to detect 22 variables among the cluster's AGB stars and to
derive pulsation periods. According to the global parameters of the cluster we
construct pulsation models taking into account the effect of the C/O ratio on
the atmospheric structure. In particular, we have used opacities appropriate
for both O-rich stars and carbon stars in the pulsation calculations.
Results: The observed P-L-diagram of NGC 1846 can be fitted using a mass of
the AGB stars of about 1.8 M_{\sun}. We show that the period of pulsation is
increased when an AGB star turns into a carbon star. Using the mass on the AGB
defined by the pulsational behaviour of our sample we derive a cluster age of
years. This is the first time the age of a cluster has been
derived from the variability of its AGB stars. The carbon stars are shown to be
a mixture of fundamental and first overtone radial pulsators.Comment: accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysic
Strange pulsation modes in luminous red giants
We show that the spectrum of radial pulsation modes in luminous red giants
consists of both normal modes and a second set of modes with periods similar to
those of the normal modes. These additional modes are the red giant analogues
of the strange modes found in classical Cepheids and RR Lyrae variables. Here,
we describe the behaviour of strange and normal modes in luminous red giants
and discuss the dependence of both the strange and normal modes on the outer
boundary conditions. The strange modes always appear to be damped, much more so
than the normal modes. They should never be observed as self-excited modes in
real red giants but they may be detected in the spectrum of solar-like
oscillations. A strange mode with a period close to that of a normal mode can
influence both the period and growth rate of the normal mode.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures, accepted by MNRA
Radial Velocity Curves of Ellipsoidal Red Giant Binaries in the Large Magellanic Cloud
Ellipsoidal red giant binaries are close binary systems where an unseen,
relatively close companion distorts the red giant, leading to light variations
as the red giant moves around its orbit. These binaries are likely to be the
immediate evolutionary precursors of close binary planetary nebula and
post-asymptotic giant branch and post-red giant branch stars. Due to the MACHO
and OGLE photometric monitoring projects, the light variability nature of these
ellipsoidal variables has been well studied. However, due to the lack of radial
velocity curves, the nature of their masses, separations, and other orbital
details has so far remained largely unknown. In order to improve this
situation, we have carried out spectral monitoring observations of a large
sample of 80 ellipsoidal variables in the Large Magellanic Cloud and we have
derived radial velocity curves. At least 12 radial velocity points with good
quality were obtained for most of the ellipsoidal variables. The radial
velocity data are provided with this paper. Combining the photometric and
radial velocity data, we present some statistical results related to the binary
properties of these ellipsoidal variables.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, 3 table
Evidence for mass ejection associated with long secondary periods in red giants
Approximately 30% of luminous red giants exhibit a Long Secondary Period
(LSP) of variation in their light curves, in addition to a shorter primary
period of oscillation. The cause of the LSP has so far defied explanation:
leading possibilities are binarity and a nonradial mode of oscillation. Here,
large samples of red giants in the Large Magellanic Cloud both with and without
LSPs are examined for evidence of an 8 or 24 m mid-IR excess caused by
circumstellar dust. It is found that stars with LSPs show a significant mid-IR
excess compared to stars without LSPs. Furthermore, the near-IR - color
seems unaffected by the presence of the 24 m excess. These findings
indicate that LSPs cause mass ejection from red giants and that the lost mass
and circumstellar dust is most likely in either a clumpy or a disk-like
configuration. The underlying cause of the LSP and the mass ejection remains
unknown.Comment: 6 pages, accepted for publication in Ap
Optical and near-infrared spectrophotometric properties of Long Period Variables and other luminous red stars
Based on a new and large sample of optical and near-infrared spectra obtained
at the Mount Stromlo and Siding Spring Observatories (Lancon & Wood 1998;
Lancon & Wood, in preparation), spectrophotometric properties of cool oxygen-
and carbon-rich Long Period Variables and supergiants are presented.
Temperatures of oxygen-rich stars are assigned by comparison with synthetic
spectra computed from up-to-date oxygen-rich model atmosphere grids. The
existence of reliable optical and near-infrared temperature indicators is
investigated. A narrow relation between the bolometric correction BC(I) and the
broad-band colour I-J is obtained for oxygen-rich cool stars. The ability of
specific near-infrared indices to separate luminosity classes, atmospheric
chemistry or variability subtypes is discussed. Some comments are also given on
extinction effects, water band strengths in Long Period Variables and the
evaluation of 12CO/13CO ratio in red giants.Comment: 14 pages, 21 figures, Latex, accepted for publication in Astronomy
and Astrophysics main journal. Also available at
http://www-astro.ulb.ac.be/~ralvarez
Optically visible post-AGB/RGB stars and young stellar objects in the Small Magellanic Cloud: candidate selection, spectral energy distributions and spectroscopic examination
We have carried out a search for optically visible post-AGB candidates in the
Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC). We used mid-IR observations from the Spitzer
Space Telescope to select optically visible candidates with a mid-IR excess. We
obtained low-resolution optical spectra for 801 candidates. After removing
contaminants and poor quality spectra, the final sample comprised of 63
post-AGB/RGB candidates of A - F spectral type. Using the spectra, we estimated
the stellar parameters: effective temperature, surface gravity and [Fe/H]. We
also estimated the reddening and deduced the luminosity using the stellar
parameters combined with photometry. Based on a luminosity criterion, 42 of
these 63 sources were classified as post-RGB candidates and the remaining as
post-AGB candidates. From the spectral energy distributions we found that 6 of
the 63 post-AGB/RGB candidates have a circumstellar shell suggesting that they
are single stars, while 27 of them have a surrounding disc, suggesting that
they are binaries. For the remaining candidates the nature of the circumstellar
environment was unclear. Variability is displayed by 38 post-AGB/RGB candidates
with common variability types being the Population II Cepheids (including
RV-Tauri stars) and semi-regular variables. This study has also revealed a new
s-process enriched RV Tauri star (J005107.19-734133.3). From the numbers of
post-AGB/RGB stars in the SMC, we were able to estimate evolutionary rates that
are in good agreement with the stellar evolution models with mass loss in the
post-AGB phase and re-accretion in the post-RGB phase. This study also resulted
in a new sample of 40 luminous young stellar objects (YSOs) of A - F spectral
type. Additionally, we also identified a group of 63 objects whose spectra are
dominated by emission lines and in some cases, a UV continuum. These objects
are likely to be either hot post-AGB/RGBs or luminous YSOs.Comment: 67 pages, 26 figures, 20 tables, 3 appendices + online supporting
information on CD
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