Self-Excited Pulsations and the Instability Strip of Long-Period Variables: the Transition from Small-Amplitude Red Giants to Semi-Regular Variables
Michele Trabucchi, Giada Pastorelli

TL;DR
This study combines hydrodynamic models and stellar population data to understand the transition from small-amplitude red giants to semi-regular variables, highlighting the role of pulsation mechanisms and stellar parameters.
Contribution
It links the onset of self-excited pulsations to stellar properties and provides a calibrated model grid for improved pulsation predictions.
Findings
Pulsation onset depends on metallicity, hydrogen content, and mixing length.
Turbulent viscosity must be calibrated for different stellar parameters.
Models are publicly available with an interpolation routine.
Abstract
We use one-dimensional hydrodynamic calculations combined with synthetic stellar population models of the Magellanic Clouds to study the onset of self-excited pulsation in luminous red giants. By comparing the results with OGLE observations in the period-luminosity diagram we are able to link the transition from small-amplitude red giants to semi-regular variables with a shift from stochastic driving to self-excited pulsations. This is consistent with previous studies relating this transition with an increase in mass-loss rate, dust formation, and the appearance of long secondary periods. The luminosity and effective temperature at the onset of pulsation are found to depend on metallicity, hydrogen content, and the adopted mixing length parameter. This confirms the role of partial hydrogen ionization in driving the pulsation, supporting the idea of a heat mechanism similar to that of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Geomagnetism and Paleomagnetism Studies
