Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-9pm4c Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-29T12:30:20.228Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Nucleosynthesis and Mixing in Low- and Intermediate-Mass AGB Stars

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 April 2016

David Hollowell
Affiliation:
Astronomy Dept., University of Illinois Urbana, Illinois 61801U. S. A.
Icko Iben Jr.
Affiliation:
Astronomy Dept., University of Illinois Urbana, Illinois 61801U. S. A.

Abstract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

The existence of carbon stars brighter than Mbol=-4 can be understood in terms of dredge up in thermally pulsing asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars. As a low- or intermediate-mass star evolves on the AGB, the large fluxes engendered in a helium shell flash cause the base of the convective envelope to extend into the radiative, carbon-rich region, and transport nucleosynthesis products to the stellar surface. Numerical models indicate that AGB stars with sufficiently massive stellar envelopes can become carbon stars via this standard dredge-up mechanism. AGB stars with less massive stellar envelopes can become carbon stars when carbon recombines in the cool, carbon-rich region below the convective envelope.

Neutron capture occurs on iron-seed nuclei during a shell flash, and the products of this nucleosynthesis are also carried to the stellar surface. The conversion of 22Ne into 25Mg can initiate neutron capture nucleosynthesis in largecore mass AGB stars, but only if these stars can survive their large mass loss rates. The current estimates of nuclear reaction rates do not allow for appreciable neutron capture nucleosynthesis via the 22Ne source in lower mass AGB stars. The carbon recombination that induces dredge up in AGB stars of small envelope mass, however, also induces mixing of 1H and 12C in such a way that ultimately a 13C neutron source is activated in these stars. The 13C source can provide an abundant supply of neutrons for the nucleosynthesis of both light and heavy elements. While the existence of neutron-nucleosynthesis products in AGB stellar atmospheres can be understood qualitatively in terms of an active neutron source, the combination of nuclear reaction theory and evolutionary models has yet to provide quantitative agreement with stellar observations.

Type
Part I. Chemical Peculiarities as Probe of Stellar Evolution
Copyright
Copyright © Springer-Verlag 1988

References

[1] Iben, I. Jr. and Renzini, A. 1983, Ann. Rev. Astr. Ap., 21, 271.Google Scholar
[2] Mathews, G.J., Takahashi, K., Ward, R.A., and Howard, W.M. 1986, Ap. J., 302, 410.Google Scholar
[3] Käppeler, F., Beer, H., Wisshak, K., Clayton, D.D., Macklin, R.L., Ward, R.A. 1982, Ap. J., 257, 821.Google Scholar
[4] Smith, V.V. 1987, preprint, to appear in Proceedings of the ACS Symposium on the Origin and Distribution of the Elements.Google Scholar
[5] Schwarzchild, M. and Härm, R. 1965, Ap. J., 142, 855.Google Scholar
[6] Iben, I. Jr., 1975, Ap. J., 196, 549.Google Scholar
[7] Iben, I. Jr., and Renzini, A. 1982, Ap. J. Lett., 263, L23.Google Scholar
[8] Iben, I. Jr., 1983, Ap. J. Lett., 275, L65.Google Scholar
[9] Lattanzio, J. 1987, Ap. J., 313, 15.Google Scholar
[10] Sackmann, I.-J. 1980, Ap. J. Lett., 241, 37.Google Scholar
[11] Iben, I. Jr., and Renzini, A. 1982, Ap. J. Lett., 259, 79.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
[12] Iben, I. Jr. 1977, Ap. J., 217, 788.Google Scholar
[13] Malaney, R.A. 1987, preprint, to appear in Proceedings of the 2nd IAP Rencontre on Nuclear Astrophysics.Google Scholar
[14] Howard, W.M., Mathews, G.J., Takahashi, K., and Ward, R.A. 1986, Ap. J., 309, 633.Google Scholar
[15] Smith, V.V. and Wallerstein, G. 1983, Ap. J., 273, 742.Google Scholar
[16] Clayton, D.D. 1968, Principles of Stellar Evolution and Nucleosynthesis (U. Chicago Press: Chicago), 546.Google Scholar
[17] Merrill, P.W. 1952, Ap. J., 116, 21.Google Scholar
[18] Mathews, G.J., Takahashi, K., Ward, R.A., and Howard, W.M. 1986, Ap. J., 302, 410.Google Scholar
[19] Takahashi, K., Mathews, G.J., and Bloom, S.D. 1986, Phys. Rev. C. 33, 296.Google Scholar
[20] Takahashi, K., Mathews, G.J., Ward, R.A. and Becker, S.A. 1986, Nucleosynthesis and Its Implications on Nuclear and Particle Physics, ed. Audouze, J. and Mathieu, N. (Reidel: Dordrecht), 285.Google Scholar
[21] Little, S.J., Little-Marenin, I.R., and Bauer, W.H. 1987, Astr. J., 94, 981.Google Scholar
[22] Zook, A.C. 1978, Ap. J. Lett., 221, L113.Google Scholar
[23] Peery, B.F. Jr., and Beebe, R.F. 1970, Ap. J., 160, 619.Google Scholar
[24] Truran, J.W. and Iben, I. Jr. 1977, Ap. J., 216, 797.Google Scholar
[25] Almeida, J. and Käppeler, F. 1983, Ap. J., 265, 417.Google Scholar
[26] Smith, V.V. and Lambert, D.L. 1986, Ap. J., 311, 843.Google Scholar
[27] Cosner, K., Iben, I. Jr. and Truran, J.W. 1980, Ap. J. Lett., 238, 91.Google Scholar
[28] Becker, S.A. 1981, Physical Processes in Red Giants, ed. Iben, I. Jr. and Renzini, A. (Reidel: Dordrecht), 141.Google Scholar
[29] Johnson, H.R. 1985, Cool Stars with Excess of Heavy Elements, ed. Jaschek, M. and Keenan, P.C. (Reidel: Dordrecht), 271.Google Scholar
[30] Pilachowski, C. 1987, this volume.Google Scholar