778 research outputs found
Selected topics in the evolution of low-mass stars
Low-mass stars play a key role in many different areas of astrophysics. In
this article, I provide a brief overview of the evolution of low-mass stars,
and discuss some of the uncertainties and problems currently affecting low-mass
stellar models. Emphasis is placed on the following topics: the solar abundance
problem, mass loss on the red giant branch, and the level of helium enrichment
associated to the multiple populations that are present in globular clusters.Comment: 10 pages, 5 figures. Invited review, to appear in "Ageing low-mass
stars: from red giants to white dwarfs", LIAC40 proceeding
A Semi-Empirical Study of the Mass Distribution of Horizontal Branch Stars in M3 (NGC 5272)
Horizontal branch (HB) stars in globular clusters offer us a probe of the
mass loss mechanisms taking place in red giants. For M3 (NGC 5272), different
shapes for the HB mass distribution have been suggested, including Gaussian and
sharply bimodal alternatives. Here we study the mass distribution of HB stars
in M3 by comparing evolutionary tracks and photometric observations. Our
approach is thus of a semi-empirical nature, describing as it does the mass
distribution that is favored from the standpoint of canonical stellar
evolutionary predictions for the distribution of stars across the CMD. We
locate, for each individual HB star, the evolutionary track whose distance from
the star's observed color and magnitude is a minimum. Artificial tests reveal
that our method would be able to detect a bimodal mass distribution, if
present. We study the impact of different procedures for taking into account
the evolutionary speed, and conclude that they have but a small effect upon the
inferred mass distribution. We find that a Gaussian shape, though providing a
reasonable first approximation, fails to account for the detailed shape of M3's
HB mass distribution: the latter may have skewness and kurtosis that deviate
slightly from a perfectly Gaussian solution. Alternatively, the excess of stars
towards the wings of the distribution may also be accounted for in terms of a
bimodal distribution in which both the low- and the high-mass modes are normal,
the former being significantly wider than the latter. However, we also show
that the inferred distribution of evolutionary times is inconsistent with
theoretical expectations. This result is confirmed on the basis of three
independent sets of HB models, suggesting that the latter underestimate the
effects of evolution away from the zero-age HB. (abridged)Comment: 12 pages, 13 figures. A&A, in pres
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