Dust formation in the winds of AGBs: the contribution at low metallicities
Marcella Di Criscienzo, Flavia Dell'Agli, Paolo Ventura, Raffaella, Schneider, Rosa Valiante, Fabio La Franca, Corinne Rossi, Simona Gallerani,, Roberto Maiolino

TL;DR
This study models dust formation in low-metallicity AGB star winds, revealing that such stars mainly produce carbon dust and contribute to interstellar dust enrichment over long timescales, with silicate formation suppressed at very low metallicities.
Contribution
The paper presents new stellar evolution models at extremely low metallicity, detailing dust formation processes and their dependence on metallicity, especially highlighting the limited role of AGB stars in silicate dust production at Z<10^{-3}.
Findings
AGB stars with Z=3*10^{-4} mainly produce carbon dust.
Silicate dust formation is suppressed below Z=10^{-3}.
Dust enrichment from AGB stars occurs over >300 Myr at this metallicity.
Abstract
We present new models for the evolution of stars with mass in the range 1Msun < M < 7.5Msun, followed from the pre-main-sequence through the asymptotic giant branch phase. The metallicity adopted is $Z=3*10^{-4} (which, with an alpha-enhancement of +0.4, corresponds to [Fe/H]=-2). Dust formation is described by following the growth of dust grains of various types as the wind expands from the stellar surface. Models with mass M>3Msun experience Hot Bottom Burning, thus maintaining the surface C/O below unity. Unlike higher Z models, the scarcity of silicon available in the envelope prevents the formation of silicates in meaningful quantities, sufficient to trigger the acceleration of the wind via radiation pressure on the dust grains formed. No silicate formation occurs below a threshold metallicity of Z=10^{-3}. Low--mass stars, with M< 2.5Msun become carbon stars, forming solid…
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