ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

Non-equilibrium chemistry and dust formation in AGB stars as probed by SiO line emission

280   0   0.0 ( 0 )
 نشر من قبل Fredrik Schoeier
 تاريخ النشر 2007
  مجال البحث فيزياء
والبحث باللغة English




اسأل ChatGPT حول البحث

We have performed high spatial resolution observations of SiO line emission for a sample of 11 AGB stars using the ATCA, VLA and SMA interferometers. Detailed radiative transfer modelling suggests that there are steep chemical gradients of SiO in their circumstellar envelopes. The emerging picture is one where the radial SiO abundance distribution starts at an initial high abundance, in the case of M-stars consistent with LTE chemistry, that drastically decreases at a radius of ~1E15 cm. This is consistent with a scenario where SiO freezes out onto dust grains. The region of the wind with low abundance is much more extended, typically ~1E16 cm, and limited by photodissociation. The surpisingly high SiO abundances found in carbon stars requires non-equilibrium chemical processes.



قيم البحث

اقرأ أيضاً

New SiO multi-transition millimetre line observations of a sample of carbon stars, including J=8-7 observations with the APEX telescope, are used to probe the role of non-equilibrium chemistry and the influence of grains in circumstellar envelopes of carbon stars. A detailed radiative transfer modelling, including the effect of dust emission in the excitation analysis, of the observed SiO line emission is performed. A combination of low- and high-energy lines are important in constraining the abundance distribution. It is found that the fractional abundance of SiO in these C-rich environments can be several orders of magnitude higher than predicted by equilibrium stellar atmosphere chemistry. In fact, the SiO abundance distribution of carbon stars closely mimic that of M-type (O-rich) AGB stars. A possible explanation for this behaviour is a shock-induced chemistry, but also the influence of dust grains, both as a source for depletion as well as production of SiO, needs to be further investigated. As observed for M-type AGB stars, a clear trend that the SiO fractional abundance decreases as the mass-loss rate of the star increases is found for the carbon stars. This indicates that SiO is accreted onto dust grains in the circumstellar envelopes.
221 - L. Decin , I. Cherchneff , S. Hony 2008
Asymptotic Giant Branch (AGB) stars are typified by strong dust-driven, molecular outflows. For long, it was believed that the molecular setup of the circumstellar envelope of AGB stars is primarily determined by the atmospheric C/O ratio. However, r ecent observations of molecules such as HCN, SiO, and SO reveal gas-phase abundances higher than predicted by thermodynamic equilibrium (TE) models. UV-photon initiated dissociation in the outer envelope or non-equilibrium formation by the effect of shocks in the inner envelope may be the origin of the anomolous abundances. We aim at detecting (i.) a group of `parent molecules (CO, SiO, HCN, CS), predicted by the non-equilibrium study of Cherchneff (2006) to form with almost constant abundances independent of the C/O ratio and the stellar evolutionary stage on the Asymptotic Giant Branch (AGB), and (ii.) few molecules, such as SiS and SO,which are sensitive to the O- or C-rich nature of the star. Several low and high excitation rotational transitions of key molecules are observed at mm and sub-mm wavelengths with JCMT and APEX in four AGB stars: the oxygen-rich Mira WX Psc, the S star W Aql, and the two carbon stars V Cyg and II Lup. A critical density analysis is performed to determine the formation region of the high-excitation molecular lines. We detect the four `parent molecules in all four objects, implying that, indeed, these chemical species form whatever the stage of evolution on the AGB. High-excitation lines of SiS are also detected in three stars with APEX, whereas SO is only detected in the oxygen-rich star WX Psc. This is the first multi-molecular observational proof that periodically shocked layers above the photosphere of AGB stars show some chemical homogeneity, whatever the photospheric C/O ratio and stage of evolution of the star.
Chemical modelling of AGB outflows is typically focused on either non-thermodynamic equilibrium chemistry in the inner region or photon-driven chemistry in the outer region. We include, for the first time, a comprehensive dust-gas chemistry in our AG B outflow chemical kinetics model, including both dust-gas interactions and grain-surface chemistry. The dust is assumed to have formed in the inner region, and follows an interstellar-like dust-size distribution. Using radiative transfer modelling, we obtain dust temperature profiles for different dust types in an O-rich and a C-rich outflow. We calculate a grid of models, sampling different outflow densities, drift velocities between the dust and gas, and dust types. Dust-gas chemistry can significantly affect the gas-phase composition, depleting parent and daughter species and increasing the abundance of certain daughter species via grain-surface formation followed by desorption/sputtering. Its influence depends on four factors: outflow density, dust temperature, initial composition, and drift velocity. The largest effects are for higher density outflows with cold dust and O-rich parent species, as these species generally have a larger binding energy. At drift velocities larger than $sim 10$ km s$^{-1}$, ice mantles undergo sputtering; however, they are not fully destroyed. Models with dust-gas chemistry can better reproduce the observed depletion of species in O-rich outflows. When including colder dust in the C-rich outflows and adjusting the binding energy of CS, the depletion in C-rich outflows is also better reproduced. To best interpret high-resolution molecular line observations from AGB outflows, dust-gas interactions are needed in chemical kinetics models.
Dust is formed in the expanding atmosphere during late stages of stellar evolution. Dust influences the dynamics and thermodynamics of the stellar atmosphere by its opacity. The dust opacity depends both on the optical properties of the grain materia l as well as on the amount of dust present. A rich source of information on some mineral phases of dust in AGB stars comes from the study of presolar grains from meteorites. This paper presents a short overview of presolar grains studies and describes how the optical properties of dust grains are obtained in the laboratory.
Outflows are a pervasive feature of mechanical feedback from super star clusters (SSC) in starburst galaxies, playing a fundamental role in galaxy evolution. Observations are now starting to confirm that outflows can undergo catastrophic cooling, sup pressing adiabatic superwinds. Here we present a suite of one-dimensional, hydrodynamic simulations that study the ionization structure of these outflows and the resulting line emission generated by the cooling gas. We use the non-equilibrium atomic chemistry package within MAIHEM, our modified version of FLASH, which evolves the ionization state of the gas and computes the total cooling rate on an ion-by-ion basis. We find that catastrophically cooling models produce strong nebular line emission compared to adiabatic outflows. We also show that such models exhibit non-equilibrium conditions, thereby generating more highly ionized states than equivalent equilibrium models. When including photoionization from the parent SSC, catastrophically cooling models show strong C IV {lambda}1549 and O VI {lambda}1037 emission. For density bounded photoionization, He II {lambda}1640, {lambda}4686, C III] {lambda}1908, Si IV {lambda}1206, and Si III {lambda}1400 are also strongly enhanced. These lines are seen in extreme starbursts where catastrophic cooling is likely to occur, suggesting that they may serve as diagnostics of such conditions. The higher ionization generated by these flows may help to explain line emission that cannot be attributed to SSC photoionization alone.
التعليقات
جاري جلب التعليقات جاري جلب التعليقات
سجل دخول لتتمكن من متابعة معايير البحث التي قمت باختيارها
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا