A study of oxygen-rich post-AGB stars in the Milky Way to understand the production of silicates from evolved stars
F. Dell'Agli, S. Tosi, D. Kamath, P. Ventura, H. Van Winckel, E., Marini, T. Marchetti

TL;DR
This study investigates oxygen-rich post-AGB stars in the Milky Way to understand dust formation and late stellar evolution, revealing correlations between IR excess, progenitor mass, and outflow velocities.
Contribution
It combines stellar evolution, dust formation, and radiative transfer models to reconstruct late AGB phases and analyze dust production in evolved stars.
Findings
Higher IR excess in massive AGB progenitors (>3Msun) due to increased dust formation.
Significant variation in outflow velocities among different stars.
Radiation pressure may be insufficient to drive winds in the faintest objects.
Abstract
The study of post asymptotic giant branch (post-AGB) stars is a valuable tool to study still poorly known aspects of the evolution of the stars through the AGB. This is due to the accurate determination of their surface chemical composition and to the peculiar shape of the SED: the emission from the central star can be easily disentangled from the contribution from the dusty shell, which can then be characterized. The goal of the present study is to reconstruct the dust formation process and more generally the late phases of the evolution of O-rich stars across the AGB phase. This is performed by studying O-rich, post-AGB stars, which are analyzed in terms of their luminosity, Teff and infrared excess. We study sources classified as single, O-rich, post-AGB stars in the Galaxy, which exhibit a double-peaked (shell-type) SED. We use results from stellar evolution modelling combined with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astro and Planetary Science
