The role of super-asymptotic giant branch ejecta in the abundance patterns of multiple populations in globular clusters
Annibale D'Ercole, Francesca D'Antona, Roberta Carini, Enrico, Vesperini, Paolo Ventura

TL;DR
This paper investigates how super-AGB star ejecta influence the chemical abundance patterns of multiple populations in globular clusters, expanding previous models by incorporating new yields and exploring various formation scenarios.
Contribution
It introduces the use of recently calculated super-AGB yields into globular cluster models, demonstrating their impact on explaining observed abundance patterns and cluster properties.
Findings
Super-AGB ejecta can explain extreme Na-rich, O-poor stars with deep mixing.
Models with super-AGB ejecta and pristine gas reproduce observed abundance spreads.
Short-duration star formation episodes (~10 Myr) are compatible with cluster evolution constraints.
Abstract
In order to account for the chemical composition of a stellar second generation (SG), Globular Clusters (GCs) evolution models based on the asymptotic giant branch (AGB) scenario so far included only the yields available for the massive AGB stars, while the possible role of super-AGB ejecta was either extrapolated or not considered. In this work, we explore the role of super-AGB ejecta using yields recently calculated by Ventura and D'Antona. Models of clusters showing extended Na-O anticorrelations, like NGC 2808, indicate that a SG formation history similar to that outlined in our previous work is required: formation of an Extreme population with very large helium content from the pure ejecta of super-AGB stars, followed by formation of an Intermediate population by dilution of stellar ejecta with pristine gas. The very O-poor Na-rich Extreme stars can be accounted for once…
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