1 agb - asymptotic giant branch wykład ii ryszard szczerba centrum astronomiczne im. m. kopernika,...

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1

AGB - AGB - Asymptotic Giant BranchAsymptotic Giant Branch

wykład IIwykład II

Ryszard Szczerba

Centrum Astronomiczne im. M. Kopernika, Toruń

szczerba@ncac.torun.pl

(56) 62 19 249 ext. 27

http://www.ncac.torun.pl/~szczerba/

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„„Asymptotic Giant Branch”Asymptotic Giant Branch”

Harm Habing, Hans Olofsson (Eds.)

A&A Library, 2004 Springer-Verlag

3

Nucleosynthesis

•The total mass of a nucleus is known to be less than the mass of the constituent nucleons. •Hence there is a decrease in mass if a companion nucleus is formed from nucleons, and from the Einstein mass-energy relation E=mc2 the mass deficit is released as energy. •This difference is known as the binding energy of the compound nucleus. Thus if a nucleus is composed of Z protons and N neutrons, it’s binding energy is: 2),(),( cNZmNmZmNZQ np

A

NZQ ),(

• A more significant quantity is the total binding energy per nucleon:

4

Nucleosynthesis: the binding energy per nucleon•General trend is an increase of Q with atomic mass up to A= 56 (Fe). Then slow monotonic decline

There is steep rise from H through 2H, 3He, to 4He fusion of H to He should release larger amount of energy per unit mass than say fusion of He to C

5

Nucleosynthesis: solar abundance distribution

6

7

nucleosynthesis: stability of nuclei

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Rate of capture of a by X per unit volume:

Here: f(E) is Maxwell-Boltzmann distribution, and

With theaveragedcross-section

Basic Nuclear Physics

9

where X(a,b)Y represents the reaction X+a → Y+band Z(c,d)Y represents the reaction Z+c → X+d

Statistical equilibrium if

The general problem:

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Elemental abundance curveNucleosynthesis

Primordial:1H 4He 2D 3He 7Li

Stellar:H burningHe burningα processe processs processr processp process

Cosmic Ray:x process

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PPI:p p → 2D e+ ν2D (p,γ) → 3He3He 3He →4He p p

→H burningHe burningα processe processs processr processp processx process

Proton-Proton Chain

Core burning in Main Sequence starsShell burning in red giants

T ~ 1.5 x107 Kq ~ 8 x1018 erg/g

Rpp ~ ρ T 3.95 near 1.5 x107 K

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PP-I (T<1.3 107 K)

Qeff= 26.20 MeV

proton-proton chain

p + p 2H + e+ + p + 2H 3He +

3He + 3He 4He + 2p

86% 14%

3He + 4He 7Be +

2 4He

7Be + e- 7Li + 7Li + p 2 4He

7Be + p 8B + 8B 8Be + e+ +

99.7% 0.3%

PP-II(T>1.3 107 K)

Qeff= 25.66 MeV PP-III(T<3 107 K)

Qeff= 19.17 MeV

net result: 4p 4He + 2e+ + 2 + Qeff

proton-proton chain at T~1.5 107 K

13

→H burningHe burningα processe processs processr processp processx process

CNO cycle

Shell burning in red giantsCore burning in massive MS stars

T ~ 1.8 x107 Kq ~ 8 x1018 erg/g

RCNO ~ ρ T 19.9 near 1.5 x107 K

12C (p,γ) 13N (e+ν) 13C (p,γ) 14N (p,γ) 15O (e+ν) 15N (p,α) 12C

14

12C(p,)13N(e+)13C(p,)14N(p,)15O(e+)15N(p,)12C

C

N

O

13

15

12

13 14 15

6 7 8

CNO isotopes act as catalysts

net result: 4p 4He + 2e+ + 2 + Qeff Qeff = 26.73 MeV

cycle limited by decay of 13N (t ~ 10 min) and 15O (t ~ 2 min)

CNO cycle

cold CNO

12C(p,)13N(p,)14O(e+,)14N(p,)15O(e+)15N(p,)12C

C

N

O

13

15

12

13 14 15

6 7 8

hot CNO

14

cycle limited by decay of 14O (t ~ 70.6 s) and 15O (t ~ 2 min)

T8 ~ 0.8 – 1

T8 < 0.8

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H burning→ He burningα processe processs processr processp processx process

Triple Alpha Process

He flash in degenerate cores, M < 2 Msolar

Core burning in HB red giantsShell burning on the AGB

T ~ 1 – 2 x108 Kq ~ 8 x1017 erg/g

R3α ~ ρ2 T 41.0 near 108 K

4He (2α, γ) 12C

12C (α,γ) 16O

further helium burning in red giants:

16

Successive Nuclear Fuel

in massive red giants, M > 9 Msolar

T ~ 0.6 – 5 x109 K

12C burning: 12C (12C,α) 20Ne

20Ne burning: 20Ne (γ,α) 16O

16O burning: 16O (16O,α) 28Si

28Si burning: 28Si (α,γ) → → → 56Fe

H burningHe burning→ α process→ e process→ s process→ r process→ p processx process

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Successive Nuclear Fuel

core burning timescales:

H ~ 107 – 1010 yrsHe ~ 106 – 108 yrsC ~ 300 yrsNe ~ 1 yrO ~ 8 mo.Si ~ 4 days

H burningHe burning→ α process→ e process→ s process→ r process→ p processx process

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16O20Ne24Mg28Si32S24Ar40Ca

Alpha Nuclei (16 < A < 40, even-Z even-N)

α source: 20Ne (γ,α) 16O

AX (α,γ) A+4Y

H burningHe burning→ α processe processs processr processp processx process

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Iron Peak (50 < A < 60)

T ~ 3 x109 Kthermal photodissociation of heavy nuclei → statistical equilibrium

H burningHe burningα process→ e processs processr processp processx process

i.e.

responsible for supernovae light curves:

28Si → → → 56Ni (e-,ν γ) 56Co (e-,ν γ) 56Fe

20

Slow Neutron Capture (60 < A < 209)

beta decay rate >> neutron capture rateT ~ 1 – 2 x108 K

n sources: 13C (α,n) 16O 14N (α,γ) →→ 22Ne (α,n) 25Mg

H burningHe burningα processe process→ s processr processp processx process

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Rapid Neutron Capture (70 < A < 209)

neutron capture rate >> beta decay rateT ~ 0.8 – 5 x109 K

explosive shell burning in supernovae

also produces trans-bismuth elements: Th, U

H burningHe burningα processe processs process→ r processp processx process

22

Proton Capture (p,γ) or (γ,n)

proton-rich isotopes of heavy elementsT ~ 2 – 3 x109 K

supernovae envelopes?explosive 16O shell burning?

H burningHe burningα processe processs processr process→ p processx process

23

Spallation

6Li 9Be 10B 11B

fragmentation of CNO cosmic raysby collision with ISM

H burningHe burningα processe processs processr processp process→ x process

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Elemental abundance curveNucleosynthesis Round-up

PrimordialH 4He 2D 3He 7Li

StellarH burningHe burningα processe processs processr processp process

Cosmic Rayx process

25

Open Questions

ejection of nuclear material (mass loss problem)

binary evolution and nuclear burning by accretion

convective mixing-induced burning processes

26

AGB Stars: evolution•Mass loss is crucial to study of AGB evolution => leads to the termination of evolution on the AGB. •Mloss is still unknon from the first principles! •Semi-empirical formulae adopt very strong dependence of Mloss on L.

•P~RM; ~1.5-2.5, ~0.5-1.0

The fundamental mode period grows rapidly during „superwind” phase.

27

AGB stars: structure

•A schematic view of a 1Mo star. The structure is similar regardless of the stellar mass: CO degenerate core + He- and H-burning shells. Pulsations take place in the convective env.

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AGB Stars: structure

•Comparison between structure of 1 and 5 Mo stars.

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AGB Stars: nucleosynthesis - T

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AGB Stars: nucleosynthesis

31

AGB Stars: nucleosynthesis• The nucleosynthesis in AGB stars is mostly associated with H- and He-burnig (and proton and neutron captures).• The repeated 3rd dredge-up mixes the products to the stellar surface. • 4He, 12C, 14N, 16O, 19F, 22Ne, 23Na, 25,26Mg, 26,27Al and s-process elements are produced by AGB stars.

• The main reaction during shell flash is production of 12C form 4He via triple-alpha reaction (and 12C()16O).• By development of intershel convective zone (ISCZ) 12C is mixed up but at the same time 4He is mixed down. •In most calculations the composition between H- and He- shells (after dissipation of ISCZ) is mostly: 20-25% 12C; 70-75% 4He and a few percent of 16O (overshooting downwards CO core) + some minor fraction of other elements 14N, 22Ne,... •ISCZ homogenizes region from the bottom of the He-shell almost to the H-shell!

32

AGB: the 3rd dredge-up and making C-stars • Iben (1975) and Sugimoto & Nomoto (1975) discovered how C-stars are produced during AGB evolution. • Iben identified four phases of a TP cycle:

The „off” phase The „on” phase (inside intershell convective zone: 75% - 4He, 22% - 12C) The „power down” phase The „dredge-up” phase (energy released during shell flash escapes from the core => the convection extentds inward in mass).

•Dredge-up par: =Mdredge/Mc

33

AGB Stars: nucleosynthesis

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AGB Stars: production of the s-process elements• The slow neutron capture is the most important

nucleosynthesis after 12C production (see Meyer 1994 and Busso et al. 1999 for review).

• Two reaction could be the neutron source:1. 22Ne(,n)25Mg = 22Ne +25Mg+n2. 13C(,n)16O ....

• Ad 1. The intershell region is rich in 14N and during shell flash the reactions: 14N(,n)18F()18O()22Ne occur. However, reaction 1. needs T~300 milion K and such temperature is too high for lower mass stars.

• Ad 2. This reaction requires T~100 milion K. But, how to get sufficient amount of 13C in the intershell region?

35

AGB Stars: the 13C pocket.• The number of protons should be „moderate” to

avoid reaction in the CNO cycle: 13C(p,)14N (Kaeppeler et al. 1990, Straniero 1995). Mp~10-4

Mo, MISCZ~10-2 Mo

• At the peak of the pulse, T is high enough (for a brief burst of neutrons from 22Ne source).

36

AGB stars: nucleosynthesis

11 AAnAAnA NnNn

dt

dN

• The simple extremes can be defined depending on the number of free neutrons available:1. neutron capturs dominate the decays (nn >

1020 cm-3; rapid: r-process)2. -decays dominate the neutron capture (nn <

108 cm-3; slow: s-process)•NA – abundance of the isobar of mass A;• <v>A - the thermally averaged neutron-capture cross section for the isobar, <v>A = <Av>T: v>T- is the thermal velocity of neutrons. – the neutron exposure: a time-integrated neutron flux [mbarn] (1 barn = 10-24 cm2)

dtn Tn

11 AAAAA NN

d

dN

37

AGB Stars: nucleosynthesis

38

AGB Stars: nucleosynthesis

39

AGB Stars: F production14N() 18F() 18O(p,) 15N() 19F (Jorrisen et al.

1992)

40

AGB Stars: F production

41

AGB Stars: nucleosynthesis

42

Massive AGB Stars: Hot Bottom BurningIf the mass of the star is sufficiently high (about 4 or 5 Mo at solar composition, but decreasing as the metallicity decreases) the bottom of the deep convective envelope actually penetrates the top of the H-shell. Hence nucleosynthesis occurs at the bottom of the convective envelope itself. This is known as "Hot Bottom Burning".

Destruction of 12C!!!

43

Synthetic AGB evolution:

• Full stellar calculations are time-consuming (especially during the AGB phase).• Stellar models depend critically on the free parameters:

mass loss; mixing length; dredge-up efficiency.

•Therefore, the synthetic evolutionary models, which use the „recipies” and description based on the result of full evolutionary models, can be used to „approximate” a wide grid of evolutionary models.•In addition, the influence of free parameters can be tested (callibrated) by comparison with observations.

44

Synthetic AGB evolution:

1) overview of published synthetic models;

2) necessary ingredients for developing a synthetic model for evolution of single AGB star;

3) basic information needed to construct population synthesis of AGB stars;

4) comparison with observations:

45

Synthetic AGB evolution:

• The first attempt to develop AGB synthetic model wit aim to investigate s-process nucleosynthesis: Iben & Truran (1978).• The main ideas of fully developed synthetic models were presented by Renzini & Violi (1981):

comparison between theoretical LF of C-stars with the observed one in the LMC;

comparison between predicted abundances in ejecta from AGB stars and those observed in PNe;

computation of amount and chemical composition of matter returned to the ISM (galactic chemical evolution).

• Weaknes of the older models: Extrapolation of the full calculations for

M<3Mo;Neglecting the metallicity dependence in the

adopted analytical formulae;Neglecting dependence of the parameteres on

the TP phase.

46

Synthetic AGB evolution:

Neglecting the breakdown of Mc-L relation due to HBB in the most massive AGB stars (Bloecker & Schoenberner 1991).

•The first synthetic model which took into account all the missing aspects was that by Groenewegen & de Jong (1993).

Using the LF of C stars in the LMC they determined dredge-up parameters and estimated mass loss during AGB in the LMC.

• In a series of papers Groenewegen (with others) (1993-1998) extended the model to:

Compare abundances of AGB and PNe in the LMC;Compare Period of Miras in the LMC;Chek the influence of different Mloss prescriptions;Calculate stellar yields that are necessary in galactic chemical evolution models.

47

Synthetic AGB evolution:

• Marigo et al. (1996) included a more detailed description of the nucleosynthesis (she solved nuclear network to estimate the HBB effects).• Marigo et al. (1998) developed a method based on envelope integration useful in case of HBB when Mc-L luminosity is broken.

• Wagenhuber & Groenewegen (1998) derived detailed recipies as a function of M and Z, based on the full stellar evolutionary models. • Marigo et al. (1999) improved the treatment of 3rd dredge-up (a criterion was introduced to determine whether and when the 3rd dredge up occurs in star of given M and Z).

48

Synthetic AGB evolution:

• At the 1st TP the model should reproduce:Mc; Menv; L; Teff; chemical composition.

• For Mi~1.7-2.5 Mo (depending on Z) there is a significant mass loss on RGB.• 1st (and 2nd for massive AGB stars) dredge-up change chemical composition – details can be interpolated from the full stellar evolutionary models:

Schuler et al. (1992); Pols et al. 1998) Mc; Dominiquez et al. (1999), Girardi et al. (2000).

•There is also Mloss during E-AGB (see Wagenhuber & Groenewegen 1998).

Mc,1(Mi,Z) – interpolation from the models,

L1- from the Paczyński’s like relation,

T1 - theoretically or observationally constrained

49

Synthetic AGB evolution:

• L during TP

50

Synthetic AGB evolution:

• The Core Mass – L relation (CMLR).

51

Synthetic AGB evolution:

• L for massive AGB stars (HBB).

52

Synthetic AGB evolution:

• The time evolution on TP-AGB:

HC L

X

q

dt

dM .1

q - the mass burnt per unit of energy releasedX – the H abundance (in mass fraction)LH – function (t, Mc, Menv, Z)

),,,(.2 int ZMMt envc

),,,(.3 ZMMtT envceff

),,,(.4 ZMMtM envcloss

53

Synthetic AGB evolution:

• Nucleosynthesis:The minimum core mass Mc,min for dredge-up

to occur

54

Synthetic AGB evolution:

• Nucleosynthesis:The efficiency of dredge-up

c

updredge

M

M

The chemical composition of material being dredge-up

updredgeenv

updredgeISCZ

ienvold

inewi MM

MYMYY

• Taking the efficiency of dredge-up as assumed in stellar evolutionary calculations results in carbon star mystery (Iben, 1981): Too few faint C-stars were predicted•HBB nucleosynthesis (H-burning via CNO cycle)

55

Synthetic AGB evolution

56

AGB Stars: nucleosynthesis

57

AGB Stars: nucleosynthesis

dttMXtXkM

mpmkM

loss

m

o

okky

ky

)(])([)(

)()(

)(

)(mpk -the stellar yield of an element k: the mass fraction of a star with initial mass m that is converted into the element k and returned to the ISM during its entire lifetime (m).

58

Stellar yields

•Groenwegen(up) Marigo (bottom):

Similar trends are seenH & He – mirror-like behaviourPeaks around 2-3 Mo are related to the largest number of TP’s 12C yield is larger for lower Z

59

Synthetic AGB evolution:

• Form one star to population synthesisN(M) – mass distribution function (in number

of stars per unit mass interval)

• IMF • SFR• the liftime of a star on the AGB• the age of the system• the pre-AGB lifetime of a star with mass M

dxxZMTMdMMNZMt

o G

AGB

]),([)()(),(

)(

)(

])[(

])[(1

1

Mt

M

T

t

yrMM

MM

AGB

G

AGB

o

o

),()),(()()( ZMtZMTMdMMN AGBG

60

Observational constraints

•Initial-Final Mass Relation (IMFR).

61

Observational constraints

•Carbon Star Luminosity Function (CSLF).

•Dredge-up is active in stars with Mi>1.2-1.4Mo

•Dredge-up efficiency ~0.5-0.6

62

Observational constraints

• C-stars are cooler (redder) than M type stars

63

Observational constraints

• abundances in PNe

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