Evolution and nucleosynthesis prior to the AGB phase

Similar documents
Evolution and nucleosynthesis of AGB stars

Introduction to nucleosynthesis in asymptotic giant branch stars

MAJOR NUCLEAR BURNING STAGES

Lecture 8: Stellar evolution II: Massive stars

Stellar Interior: Physical Processes

:Lecture 27: Stellar Nucleosynthesis. Cassieopia A

Oxygen in AGB stars and the relevance of planetary nebulae to mapping oxygen in the Universe

AGB stars as laboratories for nuclear physics

Evolution of Intermediate-Mass Stars

A Star Becomes a Star

Stars and their properties: (Chapters 11 and 12)

13 Synthesis of heavier elements. introduc)on to Astrophysics, C. Bertulani, Texas A&M-Commerce 1

Nuclear Astrophysics

Stellar Evolution Stars spend most of their lives on the main sequence. Evidence: 90% of observable stars are main-sequence stars.

S381 The Energetic Universe. Block 2 Nucleosynthesis and Stellar Remnants. Paul Ruffle

Fundamental Stellar Parameters. Radiative Transfer. Stellar Atmospheres. Equations of Stellar Structure

Outline - March 18, H-R Diagram Review. Protostar to Main Sequence Star. Midterm Exam #2 Tuesday, March 23

Today. Stars. Evolution of High Mass Stars. Nucleosynthesis. Supernovae - the explosive deaths of massive stars

Nuclear Astrophysics

Life of a High-Mass Stars

Nuclear Binding Energy

7. The Evolution of Stars a schematic picture (Heavily inspired on Chapter 7 of Prialnik)

Chapter 17 Lecture. The Cosmic Perspective Seventh Edition. Star Stuff Pearson Education, Inc.

Stellar Structure and Evolution

LECTURE 15 Jerome Fang -

Pre Main-Sequence Evolution

Astronomy 404 October 9, 2013

The Later Evolution of Low Mass Stars (< 8 solar masses)

Nuclear Astrophysics

The Later Evolution of Low Mass Stars (< 8 solar masses)

LECTURE 15: WHITE DWARFS AND THE ADVANCED EVOLUTION OF MASSIVE STARS.

Einführung in die Astronomie II

Gamma-ray nucleosynthesis. Predictions - Gamma-ray nuclei - Production sites Observations - Point sources - Diffuse emission

Stars IV Stellar Evolution

Introductory Astrophysics A113. Death of Stars. Relation between the mass of a star and its death White dwarfs and supernovae Enrichment of the ISM

Rubidium, zirconium, and lithium production in massive AGB stars

Week 4: Nuclear physics relevant to stars

Section 12. Nuclear reactions in stars Introduction

Chapter CHAPTER 11 ORIGIN OF THE ELEMENTS

Before proceeding to Chapter 20 More on Cluster H-R diagrams: The key to the chronology of our Galaxy Below are two important HR diagrams:

10/26/ Star Birth. Chapter 13: Star Stuff. How do stars form? Star-Forming Clouds. Mass of a Star-Forming Cloud. Gravity Versus Pressure


Stellar Astronomy Sample Questions for Exam 4

Guiding Questions. The Deaths of Stars. Pathways of Stellar Evolution GOOD TO KNOW. Low-mass stars go through two distinct red-giant stages

The Deaths of Stars 1

Stellar Evolution: The Deaths of Stars. Guiding Questions. Pathways of Stellar Evolution. Chapter Twenty-Two

Stellar Evolution. Eta Carinae

Lecture 16: Evolution of Low-Mass Stars Readings: 21-1, 21-2, 22-1, 22-3 and 22-4

Guiding Questions. The Deaths of Stars. Pathways of Stellar Evolution GOOD TO KNOW. Low-mass stars go through two distinct red-giant stages

Astrophysical Nucleosynthesis

Lecture 16: The life of a low-mass star. Astronomy 111 Monday October 23, 2017

Stars: Their Life and Afterlife

THIRD-YEAR ASTROPHYSICS

Stars with Mⵙ go through two Red Giant Stages

Low mass stars. Sequence Star Giant. Red. Planetary Nebula. White Dwarf. Interstellar Cloud. White Dwarf. Interstellar Cloud. Planetary Nebula.

Chapters 12 and 13 Review: The Life Cycle and Death of Stars. How are stars born, and how do they die? 4/1/2009 Habbal Astro Lecture 27 1

High Mass Stars. Dr Ken Rice. Discovering Astronomy G

Chapter 12 Stellar Evolution

The Evolution of Low Mass Stars

The life of a low-mass star. Astronomy 111

17.3 Life as a High-Mass Star

Lecture #1: Nuclear and Thermonuclear Reactions. Prof. Christian Iliadis

Chapter 17 Lecture. The Cosmic Perspective Seventh Edition. Star Stuff Pearson Education, Inc.

Nucleosynthesis of Low and Intermediate-mass Stars

Lecture 7: Stellar evolution I: Low-mass stars

Interactions. Laws. Evolution

What Powers the Stars?

Astronomy 114. Lecture 20: Death of stars. Martin D. Weinberg. UMass/Astronomy Department

Evolution of High Mass Stars

Primer: Nuclear reactions in Stellar Burning

Life on the main sequence is characterized by the stable burning of hydrogen to helium under conditions of hydrostatic

In the Beginning. After about three minutes the temperature had cooled even further, so that neutrons were able to combine with 1 H to form 2 H;

Stars, Galaxies & the Universe Announcements. Stars, Galaxies & the Universe Lecture Outline. HW#7 due Friday by 5 pm! (available Tuesday)

Astronomy 1504 Section 002 Astronomy 1514 Section 10 Midterm 2, Version 1 October 19, 2012

Super-AGB Stars Understood, Unknown and Uncertain Physics

Stellar Explosions (ch. 21)

Rob Izzard. February 21, University of Utrecht. Binary Star Nucleosynthesis. Nucleosynthesis. Single Star Evolution. Binary Star.

HR Diagram, Star Clusters, and Stellar Evolution

Lifespan on the main sequence. Lecture 9: Post-main sequence evolution of stars. Evolution on the main sequence. Evolution after the main sequence

Nuclear Astrophysics - I

Protostars on the HR Diagram. Lifetimes of Stars. Lifetimes of Stars: Example. Pressure-Temperature Thermostat. Hydrostatic Equilibrium

Astronomy Ch. 21 Stellar Explosions. MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Evolution from the Main-Sequence

Astronomy 113. Dr. Joseph E. Pesce, Ph.D. Dr. Joseph E. Pesce, Ph.D.

High-precision (p,t) reactions to determine reaction rates of explosive stellar processes Matić, Andrija

ASTR-101 4/4/2018 Stellar Evolution: Part II Lecture 19

Astronomy 104: Stellar Astronomy

Life and Death of a Star. Chapters 20 and 21

Principles of Astrophysics and Cosmology

Supernova events and neutron stars

10/17/2012. Stellar Evolution. Lecture 14. NGC 7635: The Bubble Nebula (APOD) Prelim Results. Mean = 75.7 Stdev = 14.7

Review: HR Diagram. Label A, B, C respectively

Reading and Announcements. Read Chapter 14.1, 14.2 Homework #6 due Tuesday, March 26 Exam #2, Thursday, March 28

Lecture 24: Testing Stellar Evolution Readings: 20-6, 21-3, 21-4

Type II Supernovae Overwhelming observational evidence that Type II supernovae are associated with the endpoints of massive stars: Association with

Astronomy. Stellar Evolution

ASTR-1020: Astronomy II Course Lecture Notes Section VI

Billions and billions of stars

Phys 100 Astronomy (Dr. Ilias Fernini) Review Questions for Chapter 9

Compton Lecture #4: Massive Stars and. Supernovae. Welcome! On the back table:

Transcription:

Evolution and nucleosynthesis prior to the AGB phase Amanda Karakas Research School of Astronomy & Astrophysics Mount Stromlo Observatory

Lecture Outline 1. Introduction to AGB stars, and the evolution prior to the AGB phase 2. Evolution and nucleosynthesis prior to the AGB phase 3. Evolution and nucleosynthesis of AGB stars 4. The slow-neutron capture process in AGB stars 5. Low and zero-metallicity AGB evolution 6. Super-AGB stars and post-agb objects

Outline of this lecture 1. Review of hydrogen and helium burning 2. Nucleosynthesis during core hydrogen burning 3. Surface abundance changes due to the first and second dredge-up events 4. The core He-flash 5. Nucleosynthesis during core helium burning

Central Burning lifetimes 25Msun 5Msun Burning process Temperature (Kelvin) Lifetime (years) Lifetime (years) H burning 3.8 x 10 7 (25) 6.7 x 10 6 7.8 x 10 7 2.8 x 10 7 (5) He burning 2.0 x 10 8 (25) 0.84 x 10 6 2.0 x 10 7 1.4 x 10 8 (5) Carbon burning 8.4 x 10 8 522 -- Neon burning 1.6 x 10 9 0.891 -- Oxygen burning 2.1 x 10 9 0.402 -- Silicon burning 3.7 x 10 9 0.733 days -- From Woosley, Heger & Weaver (2002, Rev. Mod. Phys. 74, 1015)

Energy content of burning processes Consider the reaction 12 C(α,γ) 16 O Entrance channel contains 12 C and 4 He; the exit channel contains 16 O and a gamma-ray photon Q-value is the energy released in the exit channel Define the atomic mass excess M az = 931.478 (M az - A), in MeV 931.478 is the rest-mass of 1 atomic mass units (amu) in MeV, M az mass of species (A,Z) Define Q, Q = c 2 ( M a + M X - M b - M Y ) = M a + M X - M b - M Y = 2.42475 + 0 - (-4.73655) = 7.13160 MeV Note that Q for H-burning ~ 26.731 Mev for 4p to 4 He

Energy release per burning stage Define q = Q N a / A, where A = the total mass of nucleons q is the energy released upon consumption of a unit mass of fuel by the process in question 1 MeV/nucleon = 0.964844 X 10 18 erg/g Process 4H 4 He 3α 12 C 4α 16 O 2 12 C 24 Mg 2 20 Ne 16 O + 24 Mg 2 16 O 32 S 28 Si 56 Fe q ( 10 18 erg/g) 5 to 7 0.585 0.870 0.5 0.11 0.5 0 to 0.3 q (MeV/nucleon) 5 to 7 0.606 0.902 0.52 0.11 0.52 0 to 0.31

Population I clump giants The number of stars is proportional to the lifetime! Core He-burning clump Core H-burning From Faulkner & Cannon, 1973, ApJ, 180, 435

Hydrogen burning reactions Proton-proton chains Most important energy generating reactions in stars with M < 1.5 M sun (our Sun!) In the Sun, 86% of the time is spent in the PPI chain, where p + p D + e + + ν + 0.42 MeV D + p 3 He + γ (5.49 MeV) 3 He + 3 He 4 He + 2 p + 12.86 MeV The remainder of the time are spent in PPII (14%) and PPIII (0.02%) Energetic neutrinos from PPIII and other reactions have been detected, leading to the famous solar neutrino problem Where only 1/4 the number of ν s expected were detected Solution lies in neutrino physics. For more information: http://www.sno.phy.queensu.ca/

Proton proton chains From MPA, Neutrino Astrophysics Group

PP chains Energy generation is proportional to ~T 4, compared to ~T 17 for CNO cycles

CNO cycles C, N, O act as catalysts for H-burning The number of C+N+O nuclei is conserved I.e. remains constant Nett result is 4 H 4 He C/N/O ratios in Sun (at the solar surface) and at the various CNO cycle equilibriums are very different! Effectively, all C+N+O is converted to 14 N The CN cycle operates first and at lower temperature to the ON cycles Nearly all of the energy comes from the CN cycle Temperature dependence of CN cycle is ~T 17

CN CNO cycles

CNO equilibrium ratios Ratios 12 C/ 14 N/ 16 O 12 C/ 13 C Surface of Sun 3/1/9 90 CNO equilibrium 1/120/10 ~3 C/N/O ratios at stellar surface and from the CNO cycle equilibriums are very different! 13 C and 14 N are enhanced 16 O abundance barely changed Low C-isotopic ratios at the surface of a star an indication that material was exposed to CN cycling

Advanced H-burning cycles

Helium burning Typical T ~ 1.5 x 10 8 K, density ~ 10 3 g cm -3 4 He + 4 He 8 Be - 0.09 MeV 8 Be is very unstable, decays in ~10-15 seconds But 8 Be + 4 He 12 C ** (7.65 MeV)(γ γ) 12 C (ground state) has a very large cross section due to a resonance near the Gamow peak (Hoyle 1954) Pair of reactions is the triple-α process, effectively 3 α 12 C Energy generation from the triple- α process is a steep function of T and is proportional to ~T 40 At slightly higher T, density the 12 C(α, γ) 16 O occurs At the end of core He-burning, the composition is ~50% 12 C and ~50% 16 O (depends on rates!) Values different for shell burning because higher T

Non-energetic reactions He-burning occurs in the ashes of H-burning Composition is 98% 4 He, ~2% 14 N Nitrogen-14 can capture alpha particles to produce secondary nuclei, depending on T: 14 N(α, γ) 18 F(β + ν) 18 O(α, γ) 22 Ne 22 Ne + α 25,26 Mg (+n, or γ) when T > 300 million K These may have important consequences, especially since the 22 Ne(α,n) 25 Mg reaction releases free neutrons that can be captured by Fe-group elements The other main neutron producing reaction, 13 C(a,n) 16 O will be discussed in the context of the slow-neutron capture process (Lecture 3)

Evolution as a function of mass Single stars with initial masses below ~8 solar masses do not proceed beyond core helium burning Neutrino emission processes cool the centre and prevent T becoming large enough to ignite carbon to burn (~800 million K) Instead H and He burn in shells around the CO core (will become the white dwarf) Stars in this phase of evolutionary phase are called asymptotic giant branch stars, or AGB stars Stars in the range 8 to 11Msun ignite carbon under degenerate conditions (similar to core He-flash) and are known as super-agb stars (Lecture 6)

Where mixing takes place TDU, HBB SDU FDU

First and second dredge-up Mixing episodes occur when the star becomes a red giant following core H or He-burning The stellar envelope becomes convective and eats down into the star as it becomes cooler, dredging up material processed during core H burning Changes to the surface composition a?er the first and second dredge-up (FDU, SDU) involve H- burning products Increases in 3,4 He, 13 C, 14 N, 23 Na and decreases in H, 12 C, 15 N, 16 O While convection moves inward for all stars a?er core He-burning, only M > 3Msun show changes to their surface composition and experience the SDU

Depth of the first and second DUPs Dashed-lines: SDU Solid lines: FDU

The second dredge-up: 6.5Msun Convective encompasses ~1.82Msun (0.28 x 6.5) during core H-burning! During FDU, envelope reaches down to ~1.35Msun, whereas during the SDU, the envelope reaches 0.95Msun

The first dredge-up Next five diagrams from my thesis. Composition profile as a function of mass, just a?er core H burning has finished:

FDU as a function of mass In the 1Msun, about 75% of the star is mixed by FDU In the 3Msun, about 85% of the star is mixed by FDU

FDU as a function of metallicity, Z In the 1Msun, about 75% of the star is mixed by FDU In the low-z 1Msun, about 72% of the star is mixed by FDU

Carbon isotope ratio A?er the FDU A?er the SDU

Nitrogen isotope ratio

O-isotopic ratios

Sodium

The need for extra-mixing Observations of C,N,O elements in evolved giants have allowed us to verify the accuracy of the first dredge-up models (e.g. Charbonnel 1994) In a large fraction of low-mass giants, the 12 C/ 13 C and 12 C/ 14 N ratios appeared lower than the predictions Different mechanisms have been proposed to allow for deviations from standard evolution theory (recently thermohaline mixing, Charbonnel & Zahn; Eggleton et al.) Some extra-mixing below the deepest extent that the FDU reaches, is needed for m < 2 Msun

Luminosity bump When the convection retreats a?er FDU it leaves behind a discontinuity in the abundance profiles This inhibits further mixing The H-shell eventually catches up and erases the discontinuity:

Extra mixing a?er FDU from Charbonnel (1994) Fig 3 from Charbonnel & Zahn (2007)

The core helium flash He is ignited under electron-degenerate conditions, with the He-luminosity reaching ~10 9 Lsun Takes about 10 6 years to remove degeneracy, and to move to quiescent He-burning During the flash, about 3% of the He is converted to 12 C The huge luminosities produced by the flash drive a convective region between the centre and base of the envelope Some debate if any mixing between the flash (which makes carbon) and the envelope could take place Unlikely except in Z = 0 stars (Lecture 5) Stars over ~2.5Msun do not experience the flash, because their cores do not become electron degenerate

Nucleosynthesis during the flash Flash driven convective pocket Envelope, surface composition About 3% of the He is converted to 12 C

Nucleosynthesis during He-burning The nucleosynthesis products from central He-burning do not reach the surface Exceptions: when binary interactions occur e.g. white dwarfs that explode as Type Ia supernovae, classical novae explosions For single stars, the He-burnt layers can escape from massive WR stars when they lose mass, or through the supernovae explosion He-burning is important because it determines the mass of the He-exhausted core and the composition of the eventual white dwarf The latter depends on the uncertain 12 C(a,γ) 16 O reaction, which determines the final C/O ratio in the core The mass of the core depends on semiconvective mixing and the inclusion of overshoot - both increase the mass

Core He-burning: 5Msun As 4 He burns it initially produces 12 C. But once there is a substantial amount of 12 C then we get 16 O from 12 C(α,γ) 16 O as shown in the central abundances of 12 C and 16 O, below:

End of core He-burning CO core He-burning shell 12 C 4 He H 16 O Results for a 6.5Msun, Z = 0.02 model: Central H-burning lifetime ~ 43 Myr Central He-burning lifetime ~ 9.6 Myr envelope

Convective overshoot We define a region to be convective if it satisfied the Schwarzschild criteria for convection That is, if in a region of the star, the ratio of the adiabatic to radiative temperature gradient is > 1, blobs of material are unstable to convective motions At this formal border the acceleration of material is zero but the velocity can be finite This is one reason why it is thought that overshoot, that is mixing beyond the formal boundary, takes place Rotation may also cause mixing beyond the formal boundary If overshoot is included then core H, He-burning lifetimes are increased because more fuel is being added The mass of the H, He-exhausted cores also increase

Effect of overshoot on HR diagram From Castellani et al. (2003)

Semiconvection During core H, He burning in massive stars (8Msun and above), and during He-burning in lower mass stars, we find semiconvection Where the concentration of chemical species are redistributed within a region that is stable to the standard Schwarzschild criteria for convection, but unstable to the Ledoux criteria A thermal gradient favours convection (Schwarzschild criteria) and relatively quick mixing time-scales but the competing effect of a molecular weight gradient (Ledoux criteria) will inhibit the mixing Main effect of semiconvection is to extend the core burning lifetime, and to increase the mass of the core

22Msun star from Heger et al. (2004)

Summary of 2 nd lecture Low and intermediate-mass stars go through central H and He-burning before reaching the AGB Mixing episodes occur, where the convective envelope moves inward, in mass, to where partial or full hydrogen burning took place during the main sequence The first dredge-up results in important surface compositional changes for low-mass stars with M < 3Msun Extra-mixing episodes may also occur in low-mass stars The SDU is the most important for more massive stars, between 4 to 8Msun Nitrogen increases at the surface, along with decreases in the carbon isotopic ratio He is ignited under degenerate conditions in stars less than about 2.5Msun, and non-degenerately in more massive objects

Summary of 2 nd lecture Overshoot and semiconvection increase the lifetimes and masses of core H, He-burning regions However the products of central He-burning, including the explosive core He-flash, do not reach the stellar surface Except in in a few cases that won t be discussed here including Type Ia supernovae and novae Massive stars over 8Msun also may release the products of He-burning to the interstellar medium when they become WR stars The core He-flash in Z=0 stars may drive mixing between the convective region and surface, see Lecture 5!