Herschel/HIFI observations of O-rich AGB stars : molecular inventory
K. Justtanont, T. Khouri, M. Maercker, J. Alcolea, L. Decin, H., Olofsson, A. P. Marston, D. Teyssier, J. Cernicharo, C. Dominik, A. de Koter,, G. Melnick, K. M. Menten, D. Neufeld, P. Planesas, M. Schmidt, R. Szczerba,, R. Waters

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel/HIFI observations to analyze the molecular composition, outflow dynamics, and mass-loss mechanisms of O-rich AGB stars, revealing correlations between molecular line emissions and mass-loss rates, and insights into wind acceleration.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive molecular inventory and detailed outflow analysis of O-rich AGB stars using Herschel/HIFI data, highlighting new correlations and wind acceleration behaviors.
Findings
Line luminosities of certain molecules correlate with mass-loss rate.
High excitation lines indicate accelerated outflows close to the star.
Evidence of rapid wind acceleration and possible deceleration in some cases.
Abstract
Spectra, taken with the heterodyne instrument, HIFI, aboard the Herschel Space Observatory, of O-rich asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars which form part of the guaranteed time key program HIFISTARS are presented. The aim of this program is to study the dynamical structure, mass-loss driving mechanism, and chemistry of the outflows from AGB stars as a function of chemical composition and initial mass. We used the HIFI instrument to observe nine AGB stars, mainly in the H2O and high rotational CO lines We investigate the correlation between line luminosity, line ratio and mass-loss rate, line width and excitation energy. A total of nine different molecules, along with some of their isotopologues have been identified, covering a wide range of excitation temperature. Maser emission is detected in both the ortho- and para-H2O molecules. The line luminosities of ground state lines of…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
