The Spitzer Spectroscopic Survey of S-type Stars
K. Smolders, P. Neyskens, J. A. D. L. Blommaert, S. Hony, H. Van, Winckel, L. Decin, S. Van Eck, G. C. Sloan, J. Cami, S. Uttenthaler, P., Degroote, D. Barry, M. Feast, M. A. T. Groenewegen, M. Matsuura, J. Menzies,, R. Sahai, J. Th. van Loon, A. A. Zijlstra, B. Acke, S. Bloemen

TL;DR
This study analyzes a large sample of S-type AGB stars using Spitzer infrared spectra and optical data to understand their dust composition, stellar parameters, and the chemical processes influencing their evolution, revealing links between dust features and C/O ratios.
Contribution
The paper provides a comprehensive analysis of 87 S-type AGB stars, linking dust mineralogy and molecular features to stellar C/O ratios, and introduces new diagnostics for stellar chemistry based on infrared spectral features.
Findings
Detection of SiS absorption linked to C/O ratio.
Classification of stars into three dust emission groups.
Identification of magnesium sulfides and molecular SiS co-occurrence.
Abstract
S-type AGB stars are thought to be in the transitional phase between M-type and C-type AGB stars. Because of their peculiar chemical composition, one may expect a strong influence of the stellar C/O ratio on the molecular chemistry and the mineralogy of the circumstellar dust. In this paper, we present a large sample of 87 intrinsic galactic S-type AGB stars, observed at infrared wavelengths with the Spitzer Space Telescope, and supplemented with ground-based optical data. On the one hand, we derive the stellar parameters from the optical spectroscopy and photometry, using a grid of model atmospheres. On the other, we decompose the infrared spectra to quantify the flux-contributions from the different dust species. Finally, we compare the independently determined stellar parameters and dust properties. For the stars without significant dust emission, we detect a strict relation between…
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.
