The contribution by luminous blue variable stars to the dust content of the Magellanic Clouds
C. Agliozzo, N. Phillips, A. Mehner, D. Baade, P. Scicluna, F. Kemper,, D. Asmus, W.-J. de Wit, G. Pignata

TL;DR
This study assesses the dust production of luminous blue variable stars in the Magellanic Clouds, revealing they contribute significantly more dust than other evolved stars, and may be key dust sources in galaxies.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive multi-wavelength analysis of LBV dust production in the Magellanic Clouds, quantifying their dust yield and comparing it to other stellar sources.
Findings
LBVs contribute 0.11 solar masses of dust in the LMC.
LBVs' dust production exceeds that of extreme-AGB stars by two orders of magnitude.
Total dust yield from LBVs in the LMC is estimated at 10^4-10^5 solar masses.
Abstract
(Shortened) Luminous blue variable stars (LBVs) form dust as a result of episodic, violent mass loss. To investigate their contribution as dust producers in the Magellanic Clouds, we analyse 31 LBVs from a recent census. We built a maximally complete multi-wavelength dataset of these sources from archival data from near-IR to millimetre wavelengths. We review the LBV classification on the basis of the IR SED. To derive characteristic dust parameters, we fitted the photometry resulting from a stacking analysis. For comparison we also stacked the images of low- and intermediate-mass evolved stars in the LMC. We find four classes of sources: 1) LBVs showing mid-IR dust emission plus near-IR free-free emission from an ionised stellar wind (Class 1a) or only mid-IR dust emission (Class 1b); 2) LBVs with a near-IR excess due to free-free emission only (Class 2); 3) objects with an sgB[e]…
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