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STScI, 29 Mar 20121 How Stars Die: Infrared Spectroscopy of Dusty Carbon Stars in the Local Group G. C. Sloan A.A. Zijlstra, E. Lagadec, M. Matsuura, K.E.

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Presentation on theme: "STScI, 29 Mar 20121 How Stars Die: Infrared Spectroscopy of Dusty Carbon Stars in the Local Group G. C. Sloan A.A. Zijlstra, E. Lagadec, M. Matsuura, K.E."— Presentation transcript:

1 STScI, 29 Mar 20121 How Stars Die: Infrared Spectroscopy of Dusty Carbon Stars in the Local Group G. C. Sloan A.A. Zijlstra, E. Lagadec, M. Matsuura, K.E. Kraemer, M.A.T. Groenewegen, I. McDonald, J.T. van Loon, J. Bernard-Salas, & P.R. Wood

2 STScI, 29 Mar 20122 Getting from there to here

3 STScI, 29 Mar 20123 The Local Group project Objective – Understand dust production of evolved stars as a function of metallicity Method – Use the Infrared Spectrograph on Spitzer to study carbon stars in nearby dwarf spheroidal galaxies The great simplification – Treat each of these complex systems as having a uniform metallicity Results – Sloan et al. (2012, ApJ, submitted) http://isc.astro.cornell.edu/~sloan/library/

4 STScI, 29 Mar 20124 Samples and metallicities Galaxy [Fe/H] ~ 0 Large Magellanic Cloud ~ –0.3 D = 50 kpc Small Magellanic Cloud ~ –0.7 60 kpc Fornax dSph ~ –0.3-0.8 150 kpc Sculptor dSph ~ –1.0 87 kpc Leo I dSph ~ –1.4 280 kpc Carina dSph ~ –1.7 100 kpc

5 STScI, 29 Mar 20125 M bol  mass  age  [Fe/H] Right: Fig. 14 from Revaz et al. (2009), based on evolutionary models Fornax – Most targets are younger than ~3 Gyr –Metallicities most like SMC and LMC Sculptor – Both targets are <2 Gyr old – [Fe/H] ~ –1.0

6 STScI, 29 Mar 20126 A carbon star IRAS 05373-0810 (V1187 Ori) Szczerba et al. (2002)

7 STScI, 29 Mar 20127 Local Group spectra These targets are faint! Need Cornell’s optimal extraction algorithm (Lebouteiller et al. 2010) 10,000 extracted spectra publicly available: http://cassis.astro.cornell.edu

8 STScI, 29 Mar 20128 Manchester Method Total warm amorphous carbon content Measured by the [6.4] – [9.3] color Need outflow velocity, gas-to-dust ratio to get mass-loss rate Calibrated with radiative transfer models (Groenewegen et al. 2007) Gaseous acetylene absorption strength at 7.5  m SiC dust emission strength at 11.3  m Introduced by Sloan et al. (2006) and Zijlstra et al. (2006) Applied to large comparison samples from the Galaxy, LMC, and SMC

9 STScI, 29 Mar 20129 Metallicity diagnostics Fornax follows the SMC (as expected) Sculptor and Leo I are (mostly) in the upper left MAG 29 in Sculptor is off-scale, with EW = 0.8  m and no SiC! (But even that can’t account for the expected free carbon) In more metal-poor samples: Acetylene bands strengthen SiC dust emission weakens Leads to a metallicity gradient in the figure SMC… LMC… Milky Way

10 STScI, 29 Mar 201210 Total mass-loss rates [6.4]–[9.3] scales with dust opacity (aka dust content) Multiply by outflow velocity to get dust-production rate Multiply by gas-to-dust ratio to get total mass-loss rate

11 STScI, 29 Mar 201211 Carbon-rich dust content Pulsation periods from the SAAO Fornax: Whitelock et al. (2009) Sculptor: Menzies et al. (2011) Leo I: Menzies et al. (2010) Their work is the key to making these comparisons possible Dust content increases with pulsation period Metallicity has little obvious influence

12 STScI, 29 Mar 201212 A closer look We may be seeing a decrease in dust content at the lowest metallicities Sculptor and Leo I are below the fitted line, at a 3.6  level (The Fornax data are consistent with our assumed metallicity)

13 STScI, 29 Mar 201213 C/O and metallicity After formation of CO molecules Assume C i scales with Z Assume  C independent of Z O = O i does depend on Z [O/Fe] = –0.25 [Fe/H] for –1.5 < [Fe/H] < 0.0 Melendez & Barbuy 2002, Fig. 5

14 STScI, 29 Mar 201214 Expected free carbon Take (C/O) ⊙ = 0.54 and  C = 0.56 O ⊙ Galaxy[Fe/H]C/OC free /C ⊙ Milky Way 0.01.10.19 LMC–0.31.40.44 SMC–0.72.20.68 Sculptor–1.03.50.81 Four times more free carbon in Sculptor than the Milky Way? It’s not in the dust! And it’s not in the C 2 H 2

15 STScI, 29 Mar 201215 Consequences Observation: Little change in amorphous carbon dust content with metallicity (Z) But we expect much more free carbon at low Z –Because the 3  sequence and dredge-up should not depend on Z, and there’s less O to make CO Conclusion: The dredge-up must be truncated Consequence: When the free carbon exceeds some threshold, it triggers a superwind, which strips the envelope, ends life on the AGB, and produces a PN

16 STScI, 29 Mar 201216 Consequences 2 The mass-loss history and lifetime on the AGB will determine what a star can produce and inject back into the ISM

17 STScI, 29 Mar 201217 The End


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