Carbon star wind models at solar and sub-solar metallicities: a comparative study. I. Mass loss and the properties of dust-driven winds
S. Bladh, K. Eriksson, P. Marigo, S. Liljegren, B. Aringer

TL;DR
This study models the atmospheres and winds of carbon-rich AGB stars at different metallicities, finding that mass-loss rates are similar across metallicities when considering carbon excess, with implications for stellar evolution modeling.
Contribution
It introduces a comparative modeling approach using DARWIN to analyze how metallicity affects mass loss and dust-driven winds in carbon stars, emphasizing the role of carbon excess.
Findings
Mass-loss rates are similar at solar and subsolar metallicities for given stellar parameters.
Subsolar metallicity models have approximately 15% lower mass-loss rates.
Typical grain sizes range between 0.1 and 0.5 microns, with 5-40% carbon condensation.
Abstract
The atmospheres and winds of C-type AGB stars are modeled with the 1D spherically symmetric radiation-hydrodynamical code DARWIN. To explore the metallicity-dependence of mass loss we calculate model grids at three different chemical abundances. Since carbon may be dredged up during the thermal pulses as AGB stars evolve, we keep the carbon abundance as a free parameter. The models in these three different grids all have a current mass of one solar mass; effective temperatures of 2600K, 2800K, 3000K, or 3200K; and stellar luminosities equal to log(L/Lsun)=3.70, 3.85, or 4.00. The models show that mass loss in carbon stars is facilitated by high luminosities, low effective temperatures, and a high carbon excess (C-O) at both solar and subsolar metallicities. Similar combinations of effective temperature, luminosity, and carbon excess produce outflows at both solar and subsolar…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science
