Common Envelope Mass Ejection in Evolved Stars: Modeling the Dust Emission from post-RGB stars in the LMC
Geetanjali Sarkar, Raghvendra Sahai

TL;DR
This study models the dust emission from post-RGB and post-AGB stars in the LMC, revealing differences in shell masses, disk geometries, and dust compositions, and providing insights into common envelope evolution in binary systems.
Contribution
It introduces detailed SED models for post-RGB stars, compares their dust properties with post-AGB stars, and constrains the nature of common envelope ejection processes.
Findings
Post-RGB shell masses are generally lower than post-AGB shells.
Circumstellar disks are geometrically thick with large opening angles.
Some post-RGB stars contain carbon-rich dust, indicating binary system origins.
Abstract
Common Envelope (CE) systems are the result of Roche lobe overflow in interacting binaries. The subsequent evolution of the CE, its ejection and the formation of dust in its ejecta while the primary is on the Red Giant Branch (RGB), gives rise to a recently identified evolutionary class -- dusty post-RGB stars. Their spectral energy distributions (SEDs) suggest that their mass-ejecta are similar to dusty post-Asymptotic Giant Branch (post-AGB) stars. We have modeled the SEDs of a select sample of post-RGB and post-AGB stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), quantified the total dust mass (and gas mass assuming gas-to-dust ratio) in the disks and shells and set constraints on the dust grain compositions and sizes. We find that the shell masses in the post-RGBs are generally less than those in post-AGBs, with the caveat that substantial amount of mass in both types of objects may lie…
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