CO line emission from the expanding circumstellar envelopes of red giants

1984 ◽  
Vol 285 ◽  
pp. 237
Author(s):  
W. K. Rose
2002 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 499-504 ◽  
Author(s):  
Georgij M. Rudnitskij

AbstractWhen a star with a mass of one to a few solar masses enters the red giant stage of its evolution, the radius of its atmosphere reaches several astronomical units. Pulsational instability is typical for this stage. Most stars become Mira-type or semiregular variables with light cycles of a few hundred days. Red giants lose mass at a rate M = 10−7−10−5M⊙ yr−1. Extensive gas–dust circumstellar envelopes form. These envelopes contain various molecular species. Some of these molecules (OH, H2O, SiO, HCN) manifest themselves in maser radio emission. Data on the H2O maser variability and its connection with the stellar brightness variations are discussed. In the H2O line circumstellar masers can be divided into ‘stable’ (showing persistent emission — R Aql, U Her, S CrB, X Hya) and ‘transient’ (appearing in the H2O line once per 10–15 stellar light cycles — R Leo, R Cas, U Aur). Physical mechanisms of the maser variability are discussed. The most probable process explaining the observed visual–H2O correlation is the influence of shock waves on the masing region. Usually it is assumed that shocks in Mira atmospheres are driven by stellar pulsations. Here an alternative explanation is proposed. If a star during its main sequence life possessed a planetary system, similar to the solar system, the planets will be embedded in a rather dense and hot medium. Effects of a planet revolving around a red giant at a short distance (inside its circumstellar envelope) are discussed. A shock produced by the supersonic motion of a planet can account for the correlated variability of the Hα line emission and H2O maser. If the planetary orbit is highly eccentric, then the connected Hα–H2O flare episodes may be explained by the periastron passage of the planet. New tasks for the upgraded ATCA are discussed.


1983 ◽  
Vol 103 ◽  
pp. 267-280 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alvio Renzini

Several physical processes taking place during the red (super)giant phase of intermediate-mass stars have direct observational consequences for the subsequent nebular stage. These processes include: the regular wind and the envelope ejection, the thermal pulses during the AGB phase, the dredge-up processes, and the dust formation in expanding circumstellar envelopes. In this paper it is briefly discussed how such processes affect the mass range of PN nuclei and their evolution, and the PN lifetime, composition and dust content. The last section is devoted to a cursory discussion of PNe which can be generated by binary stars.


2004 ◽  
Vol 193 ◽  
pp. 138-143
Author(s):  
H.J. Habing

AbstractMasers are known to occur in circumstellar envelopes of AGB stars that are long-period variables and have entered the TP-AGB phase. The maser radiation is intrinsically weak and detection limits prevent us from seeing maser stars much beyond the Galactic Center. Very deep searches have led to the detection of a handful of maser stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud. Some 1000 stellar masers are known. They trace a population of stars with main sequence masses between 1 and 6 M⊙ and ages between 2 and 8 Gyr, the same population that is traced by Cepheids. Their distribution in our Galaxy is the same as that of the red giants, and therefore the stars trace the galactic bar. An outstanding feature is a small disk of radius 150 pc around the galactic center. The disk is in rapid, solid body rotation and leads to a good measurement of the mass density within that distance for Sgr A.


1994 ◽  
Vol 162 ◽  
pp. 425-426
Author(s):  
D. Rohe-Koths ◽  
J. Dachs

Line emission in Be star spectra is accompanied by continuous emission both in the Balmer continuum and in the infrared spectral region, due to the same process that is responsible for Balmer line emission, i.e. to recombination radiation from ionized hydrogen in the extended circumstellar disks surrounding the hot central stars.


1999 ◽  
Vol 191 ◽  
pp. 353-362
Author(s):  
M. J. Barlow

This review covers spectroscopic results obtained with ISO on molecular and atomic line emission from the circumstellar envelopes of oxygen-rich AGB stars and post-AGB objects and from cool supergiant stars. As well as the SWS detection of the 4.27-μm CO2 band in absorption and emission from cool star envelopes, several new emission bands which have been detected in SWS spectra between 13.9 and 16.2 μm have been identified with CO2 bands. Strong H2O line emission has been observed in the LWS and SWS spectra of high mass loss rate O-rich AGB and M supergiant stars, confirming the predicted importance of this molecule as a coolant in their outflows. The proposed infrared radiative pump mechanism for circumstellar OH masers has been directly confirmed for the first time via measurements for several stars of the OH infrared pumping lines between 34.6 μm and 163 μm. Water vapour emission lines are not present in the spectra of O-rich post-AGB objects, having been replaced by broad emission features at 43 and 62 μm due to crystalline water ice that has condensed in the very cool outflows.


1987 ◽  
Vol 120 ◽  
pp. 341-342
Author(s):  
Raghvendra Sahai

We review observations to date of silicon-bearing molecules in circumstellar gas and dust around red giants. New constraints on circumstellar chemistry are provided by the discovery of (i) a systematic decrease in the [SiO]/[H2] ratio with mass loss rate, ii) SiO in carbon-rich CIT 6. The presence/absence of SiO maser emission in oxygen-rich/carbon-rich envelopes is linked to differences in grain composion and the grain-condensation radius.


2006 ◽  
Vol 450 (1) ◽  
pp. 167-179 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Teyssier ◽  
R. Hernandez ◽  
V. Bujarrabal ◽  
H. Yoshida ◽  
T. G. Phillips

2020 ◽  
Vol 31 ◽  
Author(s):  
Trung Van Dinh

Following our previous work on the hydrodynamic simulations of the structure of circumstellar envelopes in the presence of a binary companion, in this paper we present the results of radiative transfer calculations for molecular emission line HC3N J=5 – 4 from these simulated circumstellar envelopes. We show that the molecular line emission traces closely the spiral pattern and the associated density enhancement induced by the presence of the binary companion. The molecular emission provides the spatial kinematics of the features within the envelope, which is valuable for estimating the orbital parameters of the binary system and for inferring the physical conditions of the gas within the envelope. We also show that the appearance of the molecular emission depends on the viewing angle resulting in a range of shapes from the spiral pattern to ring-like features, similar to that observed recently in a number of circumstellar envelopes at high angular resolution.


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