New observations and models of circumstellar CO line emission of AGB stars in the Herschel SUCCESS programme
Taissa Danilovich, D. Teyssier, K. Justtanont, H. Olofsson, L., Cerrigone, V. Bujarrabal, J. Alcolea, J. Cernicharo, A. Castro-Carrizo, P., Garcia-Lario, A. Marston

TL;DR
This study presents new CO line observations and radiative transfer models for 53 AGB stars, revealing consistent mass-loss rates and the importance of wind acceleration in modeling their circumstellar envelopes.
Contribution
It provides the first extensive modeling of CO emission across multiple excitation lines for a large sample of AGB stars, highlighting the role of wind acceleration.
Findings
Most circumstellar envelopes can be modeled with a constant mass-loss rate.
Wind acceleration significantly affects high-J line intensities.
Mass-loss rates range from 10^{-8} to 2×10^{-5} solar masses per year.
Abstract
CONTEXT: Asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars are in one of the latest evolutionary stages of low to intermediate-mass stars. Their vigorous mass loss has a significant effect on the stellar evolution, and is a significant source of heavy elements and dust grains for the interstellar medium. The mass-loss rate can be well traced by carbon monoxide (CO) line emission. AIMS: We present new Herschel HIFI and IRAM 30m telescope CO line data for a sample of 53 galactic AGB stars. The lines cover a fairly large range of excitation energy from the line to the line, and even the line in a few cases. We perform radiative transfer modelling for 38 of these sources to estimate their mass-loss rates. METHODS: We used a radiative transfer code based on the Monte Carlo method to model the CO line emission. We assume spherically symmetric circumstellar envelopes that…
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