Tracing the phase transition of Al-bearing species from molecules to dust in AGB winds. Constraining the presence of gas-phase (Al2O3)n clusters
L. Decin, A.M.S. Richards, L.B.F.M. Waters, T. Danilovich, D., Gobrecht, T. Khouri, W. Homan, J. Bakker, M. Van de Sande, J.A. Nuth, and E., De Beck

TL;DR
This study uses ALMA observations to investigate aluminium chemistry and dust formation in AGB star winds, revealing that aluminium oxide condensation is not fully efficient and large clusters may explain observed spectral features.
Contribution
It provides new observational constraints on aluminium chemistry and dust formation, highlighting the role of large gas-phase clusters in AGB star winds.
Findings
AlO and AlOH detected beyond dust condensation zones.
Less than 2% of aluminium is in molecules, leaving room for dust.
Large (Al2O3)n clusters may explain spectral features.
Abstract
(abbreviated) We aim to constrain the dust formation histories in the winds of oxygen-rich AGB stars. We have obtained ALMA observations with a spatial resolution of 120x150 mas tracing the dust formation region of a low mass-loss rate and a high mass-loss rate AGB star, R Dor and IK Tau. Emission line profiles of AlO, AlOH and AlCl are detected and are used to derive a lower limit of atomic aluminium incorporated in molecules. We show that the gas-phase aluminium chemistry is completely different in both stars, with a remarkable difference in the AlO and AlOH abundance stratification. The amount of aluminium locked up in these 3 molecules is small, <=1.1e-7, for both stars, i.e. only <=2% of the total aluminium budget. This leaves ample of room for aluminium to be incorporated in grains. A fundamental result is that AlO and AlOH, being the direct precursors of alumina grains, are…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
