On helium-dominated stellar evolution: the mysterious role of the O(He)-type stars
N. Reindl (1), T. Rauch (1), K. Werner (1), J. W. Kruk (1), H. Todt, (3) ((1) Institute for Astronomy, Astrophysics, Eberhard Karls University,, T\"ubingen, Germany, (2) NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, USA,, (3) Institute for Physics, Astronomy

TL;DR
This paper investigates the properties and possible origins of O(He)-type stars, a rare group of helium-dominated post-AGB stars, through spectral analysis and comparison with stellar evolution models, revealing multiple formation scenarios.
Contribution
It provides detailed spectral analysis of four O(He) stars and discusses their potential evolutionary origins, highlighting the role of mergers and mass-loss processes.
Findings
O(He) stars do not show enhanced mass-loss.
Their abundances align with double helium white dwarf merger predictions.
Planetary nebulae observations challenge a merger-only origin.
Abstract
About a quarter of all post-asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars are hydrogen-deficient. Stellar evolutionary models explain the carbon-dominated H-deficient stars by a (very) late thermal pulse scenario where the hydrogen-rich envelope is mixed with the helium-rich intershell layer. Depending on the particular time at which the final flash occurs, the entire hydrogen envelope may be burned. In contrast, helium-dominated post-AGB stars and their evolution are yet not understood. A small group of very hot, helium-dominated stars is formed by O(He)-type stars. We performed a detailed spectral analysis of ultraviolet and optical spectra of four O(He) stars by means of state-of-the-art non-LTE model-atmosphere techniques. We determined effective temperatures, surface gravities, and the abundances of H, He, C, N, O, F, Ne, Si, P, S, Ar, and Fe. By deriving upper limits for the mass-loss rates…
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