132 research outputs found
Light element abundances in carbon-enhanced metal-poor stars
We model the evolution of the abundances of light elements in carbon-enhanced
metal-poor (CEMP) stars, under the assumption that such stars are formed by
mass transfer in a binary system. We have modelled the accretion of material
ejected by an asymptotic giant branch star on to the surface of a companion
star. We then examine three different scenarios: one in which the material is
mixed only by convective processes, one in which thermohaline mixing is present
and a third in which both thermohaline mixing and gravitational settling are
taken in to account. The results of these runs are compared to light element
abundance measurements in CEMP stars (primarily CEMP-s stars, which are rich in
-processes elements and likely to have formed by mass transfer from an AGB
star), focusing on the elements Li, F, Na and Mg. None of the elements is able
to provide a conclusive picture of the extent of mixing of accreted material.
We confirm that lithium can only be preserved if little mixing takes place. The
bulk of the sodium observations suggest that accreted material is effectively
mixed but there are also several highly Na and Mg-rich objects that can only be
explained if the accreted material is unmixed. We suggest that the available
sodium data may hint that extra mixing is taking place on the giant branch,
though we caution that the data is sparse.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 9 figures, 1 tabl
The effects of thermohaline mixing on low-metallicity asymptotic giant branch stars
We examine the effects of thermohaline mixing on the composition of the
envelopes of low-metallicity asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars. We have
evolved models of 1, 1.5 and 2 solar masses from the pre-main sequence to the
end of the thermally pulsing asymptotic giant branch with thermohaline mixing
applied throughout the simulations. In agreement with other authors, we find
that thermohaline mixing substantially reduces the abundance of helium-3 on the
upper part of the red giant branch in our lowest mass model. However, the small
amount of helium-3 that remains is enough to drive thermohaline mixing on the
AGB. We find that thermohaline mixing is most efficient in the early thermal
pulses and its efficiency drops from pulse to pulse. Nitrogen is not
substantially affected by the process, but we do see substantial changes in
carbon-13. The carbon-12 to carbon-13 ratio is substantially lowered during the
early thermal pulses but the efficacy of the process is seen to diminish
rapidly. As the process stops after a few pulses, the carbon-12 to carbon-13
ratio is still able to reach values of 10^3-10^4, which is inconsistent with
the values measured in carbon-enhanced metal-poor stars. We also note a
surprising increase in the lithium-7 abundance, with log epsilon(Li-7) reaching
values of over 2.5 in the 1.5 solar mass model. It is thus possible to get
stars which are both C- and Li-rich at the same time. We compare our models to
measurements of carbon and lithium in carbon-enhanced metal-poor stars which
have not yet reached the giant branch. These models can simultaneously
reproduced the observed C and Li abundances of carbon-enhanced metal-poor
turn-off stars that are Li-rich, but the observed nitrogen abundances still
cannot be matched.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 12 pages, 7 figure
The evolution of low-metallicity asymptotic giant branch stars and the formation of carbon-enhanced metal-poor stars
We investigate the behaviour of asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars between
metallicities Z = 10-4 and Z = 10-8 . We determine which stars undergo an
episode of flash-driven mixing, where protons are ingested into the intershell
convection zone, as they enter the thermally pulsing AGB phase and which
undergo third dredge-up. We find that flash-driven mixing does not occur above
a metallicity of Z = 10-5 for any mass of star and that stars above 2 M do not
experience this phenomenon at any metallicity. We find carbon ingestion (CI),
the mixing of carbon into the tail of hydrogen burning region, occurs in the
mass range 2 M to around 4 M . We suggest that CI may be a weak version of the
flash-driven mechanism. We also investigate the effects of convective
overshooting on the behaviour of these objects. Our models struggle to explain
the frequency of CEMP stars that have both significant carbon and nitrogen
enhancement. Carbon can be enhanced through flash-driven mixing, CI or just
third dredge up. Nitrogen can be enhanced through hot bottom burning and the
occurrence of hot dredge-up also converts carbon into nitrogen. The C/N ratio
may be a good indicator of the mass of the primary AGB stars.Comment: 15 pages, 13 figures, 1 table, accepted by MNRA
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