How much mass and angular momentum can the progenitors of carbon-enriched stars accrete?
E. Matrozis, C. Abate, R. J. Stancliffe

TL;DR
This study models how angular momentum limits mass accretion in binary progenitors of carbon-enriched stars, showing that rotation constraints significantly restrict accreted mass, challenging existing enrichment explanations.
Contribution
It provides detailed stellar evolution calculations considering angular momentum effects, revealing that rotation limits accretion to much less than previously assumed.
Findings
Maximum accreted mass before critical rotation is about 0.05 solar masses.
Accretion from a Keplerian disk likely leads to rapid stellar spin-up.
Significant angular momentum loss or lower specific angular momentum is needed for substantial accretion.
Abstract
The chemically peculiar barium stars, CH stars, and most CEMP stars are all believed to be the products of mass transfer in binary systems from a now extinct AGB primary star. The mass of the AGB star and the orbital parameters of the system are the key factors usually considered when determining how much mass is transferred onto the lower-mass main-sequence companion. What is usually neglected, however, is the angular momentum of the accreted material, which should spin up the accreting star. If the star reaches critical rotation, further accretion should cease until the excess angular momentum is somehow dealt with. If the star cannot redistribute or lose the angular momentum while the primary is on the AGB, the amount of mass accreted could be much lower than otherwise expected. Here we present calculations, based on detailed stellar evolution models, of the mass that can be accreted…
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