Effects of metallicity on the chemical composition of carbon stars

J.M. Leisenring (Univ. of Virginia), F. Kemper (Univ. of Manchester), G.C. Sloan (Cornell)

2008, ApJ, 681, 1557

Full manuscript available locally (PDF).

We present Spitzer IRS data on 19 asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud, complementing existing published data sets of carbon stars in both Magellanic Clouds and the Milky Way, to investigate the effects of metallicity on dust and molecular spectral features arising from the circumstellar envelope. We find that the C2H2 P and R branches at 7.5 micron are affected by dust dilution at higher mass-loss rates - albeit to a lesser extent for sources in the Magellanic Clouds, compared to the Milky Way - while the narrow 13.7 micron C2H2 Q branch only shows the effect of dust dilution at low mass-loss rates. A strong metallicity dependence is not observed for the Q branch. Independent of metallicity, we also provide an explanation for the observed shifts in the central wavelength of the SiC emission feature, as we show that these are largely caused by molecular band absorption on either side of the dust emission feature, dominating over shifts in the central wavelength caused by self-absorption. We have devised a method to study the dust condensation history in carbon-rich AGB stars in different metallicity environments, by measuring the strength of the 11.3 µm SiC and 30 µm MgS features with respect to the continuum, as a function of mass-loss rate. With this method, it is possible to distinguish in what order SiC and graphite condense, which is believed to be sensitive to the metallicity, prior to the eventual deposit of the MgS layer.


Home Library

Last modified 30 August, 2008. © Gregory C. Sloan and others.