We suggest that the gap observed at 20,000 K in the horizontal branches of
several Galactic globular clusters is caused by a small amount of extra mass
loss which occurs when stars start to "peel off" the red giant branch (RGB),
i.e., when their effective temperature starts to increase, even though they may
still be on the RGB. We show that the envelope structure of RGB stars which
start to peel off is similar to that of late asymptotic giant branch stars
known to have a super-wind phase. An analogous super-wind in the RGB peel-off
stars could easily lead to the observed gap in the distribution of the hottest
HB stars.Comment: 9 pages; Accepted by ApJ Letters; Available also at
http://www.astro.puc.cl/~mcatelan