Asteroseismology sheds light on the origin of carbon-deficient red giants: likely merger products and linked to the Li-rich giants
Sunayana Maben, Simon W. Campbell, Yerra Bharat Kumar, Bacham E., Reddy, Gang Zhao

TL;DR
This study uses asteroseismology, spectroscopy, and astrometry to characterize carbon-deficient red giants, revealing their rarity, mostly being low-mass red clump stars, with some being Li-rich, and proposing merger scenarios as their origin.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis combining multiple data sources to understand the origin of CDGs, identifying their properties, and proposing merger and mass-transfer scenarios as explanations.
Findings
CDGs are rare, constituting 0.15% of the sample.
Most CDGs are low-mass stars in the red clump phase.
Half of the CDGs are Li-rich giants.
Abstract
Carbon-deficient red giants (CDGs) are a peculiar class of stars that have eluded explanation for decades. We aim to better characterise CDGs by using asteroseismology (Kepler, TESS) combined with spectroscopy (APOGEE, LAMOST), and astrometry (Gaia). We discovered 15 new CDGs in the Kepler field, and confirm that CDGs are rare, being only of our background sample. Remarkably, we find that our CDGs are almost exclusively in the red clump (RC) phase. Asteroseismic masses reveal that our CDGs are primarily low-mass stars ( 2~M), in contrast to previous studies which suggested they are intermediate mass () based on HR diagrams. A very high fraction of our CDGs () are also Li-rich giants. We observe a bimodal distribution of luminosity in our CDGs, with one group having normal RC luminosity and the other being a factor of two…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
