Gravonuclear Instabilities in Post-Horizontal-Branch Stars


Abstract in English

We investigate the gravonuclear instabilities reported by Bono et al. (1997a,b) during the onset of helium-shell burning at the end of the horizontal-branch (HB) phase. These instabilities are characterized by relaxation oscillations within the helium shell which lead to loops in the evolutionary tracks. We find the occurrence of these instabilities depends critically on how the breathing pulses are suppressed near the end of the HB phase. If they are suppressed by omitting the gravitational energy term in the stellar structure equations, then the helium profile within the core at the end of the HB phase will contain a broad region of varying helium abundance. The helium-burning shell which forms in this region is too thick to be unstable, and gravonuclear instabilities do not occur. If, on the other hand, the breathing pulses are suppressed by prohibiting any increase in the central helium abundance, then the final helium profile can exhibit a large discontinuity at the edge of the helium-exhausted core. The helium shell which forms just exterior to this discontinuity is then much thinner and can be thermally unstable. Even in this case, however, the gravonuclear instabilities disappear as soon as the nuclear burning broadens the helium shell into its characteristic S-shape. We conclude that the gravonuclear instabilities found by Bono et al. are a consequence of the ad hoc procedure used to suppress the breathing pulses.

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