Tomography of silicate dust around M-type AGB stars I. Diagnostics based on dynamical models
S. Bladh, C. Paladini, S. H\"ofner, B. Aringer

TL;DR
This study explores how interferometric observations can detect changes in silicate dust composition around M-type AGB stars, providing insights into dust formation and wind-driving mechanisms.
Contribution
It demonstrates that spatially resolved interferometry can reveal dust composition changes in the inner wind regions, unlike spectral energy distribution analysis.
Findings
Spectral energy distribution poorly indicates dust temperature variations.
Interferometry can detect Fe-free silicate signatures at 2-3 stellar radii.
Baselines probing beyond 4 stellar radii are effective for studying dust enrichment.
Abstract
The heavy mass loss observed in evolved asymptotic giant branch stars is usually attributed to a two-step process: atmospheric levitation by pulsation-induced shock waves, followed by radiative acceleration of newly formed dust grains. Detailed wind models suggest that the outflows of M-type AGB stars may be triggered by photon scattering on Fe-free silicates with grain sizes of about 0.1 - 1 m. Due to the low grain temperature, these Fe-free silicates can condense close to the star, but they do not produce the characteristic mid-IR features that are often observed in M-type AGB stars. However, it is probable that the silicate grains are gradually enriched with Fe as they move away from the star, to a degree where the grain temperature stays below the sublimation temperature, but is high enough to produce emission features. We investigate whether differences in grain temperature in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
