The transition from carbon dust to silicates production in low-metallicity AGB and SAGB stars
P. Ventura, M. Di Criscienzo, R. Schneider, R. Carini, R. Valiante, F., D'Antona, S. Gallerani, R. Maiolino, A. Tornamb\'e

TL;DR
This study models dust production in low-metallicity AGB and SAGB stars, revealing a transition from carbon-rich to silicate dust depending on stellar mass, with implications for early universe dust evolution.
Contribution
It provides detailed stellar evolution and dust formation models at Z=0.001, highlighting the impact of super-adiabatic convection treatment on dust composition predictions.
Findings
Low-mass stars produce carbon-rich dust.
More massive stars produce silicates and iron.
Super AGB stars are efficient silicate dust producers.
Abstract
We compute the mass and composition of dust produced by stars with masses in the range 1Msun<M<8 Msun and with a metallicity of Z=0.001 during their AGB and Super AGB phases. Stellar evolution is followed from the pre-main sequence phase using the code ATON which provides, at each timestep, the thermodynamics and the chemical stucture of the wind. We use a simple model to describe the growth of the dust grains under the hypothesis of a time-independent, spherically symmetric stellar wind. We find that the total mass of dust injected by AGB stars in the interstellar medium does not increase monotonically with stellar mass and ranges between a minimum of 10^{-6}Msun for the 1.5Msun stellar model, up to 2x10^{-4} Msun, for the 6Msun case. Dust composition depends on the stellar mass: low-mass stars (M < 3Msun) produce carbon-rich dust, whereas more massive stars, experiencing Hot Bottom…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
