151 research outputs found
Transition of the Stellar Initial Mass Function Explored with Binary Population Synthesis
The stellar initial mass function (IMF) plays a crucial role in determining
the number of surviving stars in galaxies, the chemical composition of the
interstellar medium, and the distribution of light in galaxies. A key unsolved
question is whether the IMF is universal in time and space. Here we use
state-of-the-art results of stellar evolution to show that the IMF of our
Galaxy made a transition from an IMF dominated by massive stars to the
present-day IMF at an early phase of the Galaxy formation. Updated results from
stellar evolution in a wide range of metallicities have been implemented in a
binary population synthesis code, and compared with the observations of
carbon-enhanced metal-poor (CEMP) stars in our Galaxy. We find that applying
the present-day IMF to Galactic halo stars causes serious contradictions with
four observable quantities connected with the evolution of AGB stars.
Furthermore, a comparison between our calculations and the observations of CEMP
stars may help us to constrain the transition metallicity for the IMF which we
tentatively set at [Fe/H] = -2. A novelty of the current study is the inclusion
of mass loss suppression in intermediate-mass AGB stars at low-metallicity.
This significantly reduces the overproduction of nitrogen-enhanced stars that
was a major problem in using the high-mass star dominated IMF in previous
studies. Our results also demonstrate that the use of the present day IMF for
all time in chemical evolution models results in the overproduction of Type I.5
supernovae. More data on stellar abundances will help to understand how the IMF
has changed and what caused such a transition.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, accepted by MNRAS Lette
The Stellar Abundances for Galactic Archaeology (SAGA) Database II - Implications for Mixing and Nucleosynthesis in Extremely Metal-Poor Stars and Chemical Enrichment of the Galaxy
We discuss the characteristics of known extremely metal-poor (EMP) stars in
the Galaxy using the Stellar Abundances for Galactic Archaeology (SAGA)
database (Suda et al. 2008, PASJ, 60, 1159).The analyses of carbon-enhanced
stars in our sample suggest that the nucleosynthesis in AGB stars can
contribute to the carbon enrichment in a different way depending on whether the
metallicity is above or below [Fe/H] ~ -2.5, which is consistent with the
current models of stellar evolution at low metallicity. We find the transition
of the initial mass function at [Fe/H] ~ -2 in the viewpoint of the
distribution of carbon abundance and the frequency of carbon-enhanced stars.
For observed EMP stars, we confirmed that some, not all, of observed stars
might have undergone at least two types of extra mixing to change their surface
abundances. One is to deplete the lithium abundance during the early phase of
red giant branch. Another is to decrease the C/N ratio by one order of
magnitude during the red giant branch phase. Observed small scatters of
abundances for alpha-elements and iron-group elements suggest that the chemical
enrichment of our Galaxy takes place in a well-mixed interstellar medium. We
find that the abundance trends of alpha-elements are highly correlated with
each other, while the abundances of iron-group elements are subject to
different slopes relative to the iron abundance. This implies that the
supernova yields of alpha-elements are almost independent of mass and
metallicity, while those of iron-group elements have a metallicity dependence
or mass dependence with the variable initial mass function.The occurrence of
the hot bottom burning in the mass range of 5 <~ M / Msun <~ 6 is consistent
with the initial mass function of the Galaxy peaked at ~ 10 - 12 Msun to be
compatible with the statistics of carbon enhanced stars with and without
s-process element (truncated)Comment: 35 pages, 27 figures, 6 tables, accepted by MNRAS, database to
reproduce figures is available at http://saga.sci.hokudai.ac.j
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