Accretion from AGB winds |
1 Institute of Astrophysics and Geophysics, Liège,
Belgium
2 Free University of Brussels, Brussels, Belgium
*Chercheur Qualifié au Fonds National de la
Recherche Scientifique (Belgium)
**Maître de Recherches au Fonds National de la
Recherche Scientifique (Belgium)
Abstract |
We have obtained very intriguing results for the correlations of r- and s-process elements with alpha elements in field metal-poor stars. We can separate the Population II stars into two subgroups, PopIIa and PopIIb, depending on the behavior of these correlations. We developed a scenario for the formation of these stars, linking their origin to globular clusters. We explain the PopIIb stars by assuming that while they belong to a globular cluster, they can accrete the s-process enriched gas ejected by the cluster's AGB stars.
Table of contents |
1. Introduction |
We have obtained accurate relative abundances for a homogeneous
sample of 21 unevolved field mildly metal-poor ([Fe/H]~ -1) stars from the
analysis of high resolution, high signal-to-noise
(S/N 200) spectra
(Jehin et al. 1999).
Looking for correlations between the element abundances, we found that the
-elements (Mg, Ca, Ti) and the
iron-peak elements (Cr, Fe, Ni)
are well correlated with each other, and the abundances of the rapid
neutron-capture (r-process) elements (e.g. Eu) are
well correlated with those of the -elements,
which is in agreement with the generally accepted idea
that those elements are produced during the explosion of massive stars.
For the slow neutron-capture elements (s-process elements Sr, Y, Zr, Ba, La,
Ce), we find that the stars can be separated into two subpopulations.
For those in PopIIa, the abundances of the s-process elements vary little
while those of the
elements increase up to a maximum value. The
stars in PopIIb show a large range in their s-process elements abundances,
while they show a constant and maximum value for the abundances of the
elements. We called this behavior the
"two-branches diagram".
The mixed r- and s-process elements Nd and Sm exhibit an intermediate
behavior.
The two-branches behavior extends to more field stars, as shown in
Figure 1,
where we have added low-metallicity ([Fe/H] < -0.6) stars
coming from other studies
(Zhao and Magain (1991), Nissen and Schuster (1997)).
As our metallicity range for (thick) disk stars is rather limited towards
metal-poor stars (-1.3 < [Fe/H] < -0.6),
we have added in Figure 2 the data obtained by
Edvardsson et al. (1993) for stars of various metallicities.
We see immediately that the higher metallicity stars do not follow the
relation obtained for metal-poor stars, but scatter
mostly through the upper left part of the diagram.
To explain these results we have developed the EASE scenario, which links the
metal-poor field stars to the globular clusters. The observations and the
EASE scenario are described in more details in Jehin et al. (1999).
One crucial piece of this scenario consists in explaining how unevolved
stars (PopIIb) can get enriched in s-process elements while the
elements abundances remain constant. The s-process elements are mainly
produced in asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars, where they are brought to
the surface through dredge-up processes.
The AGB stars lose a large fraction of their mass through stellar winds or
superwind events, releasing the s-process elements enriched gas in the
interstellar medium. Main sequence stars can accrete this matter, thereby
enriching their surface abundances in those elements.
However, in order for accretion to be efficient, the density of the enriched
gas should be large, the relative velocity of the accreting star with respect
to the gas should be low, and the time during which the accretion takes place
should be long. For these reasons, we postulate that the accretion process
has to take place in globular clusters, since the stars we observe are not in
binary systems. Later, those stars escaped from the cluster, either
by evaporation or by the cluster's disruption.
The idea that the gas ejected by the AGB stars in globular clusters can be
accreted by other stars in the cluster is not an entirely new one.
Observations of globular clusters show that they contain much too little gas
or dust, compared to what is lost by their AGB stars, and globular cluster
stars also show many abundance anomalies.
Many authors have been intrigued by the fate of the gas in globular clusters,
and among them, Scott & Rose (1975),
Faulkner & Freeman (1977), VandenBerg & Faulkner (1977), VandenBerg (1978),
and Scott & Durisen (1978), and accretion has already been suggested as a
plausible mechanism to explain abundance anomalies
(D'Antona et al. 1983, Faulkner 1984, Faulkner & Coleman 1984,
Smith 1996). It is interesting nonetheless to come back to this question
and study it in more details in the light of the new observations.
2. Mass Lost by AGB Stars |
When a star reaches the AGB phase it starts losing
a large fraction of its mass.
We show in Figure 3 the fraction of the cluster's
initial mass which is
re-injected in the cluster as gas. To obtain these results we have assumed a
power-law initial mass spectrum of index
and lower and upper mass
limits ml and mu, we used the fit by
Bahcall & Piran (1983) for the stellar lifetime on the main sequence, and
the Weidemann & Koester (1983) results for the final stellar masses.
Details can be found in Thoul & al. (2000).
It is interesting to note that most of the gas is re-injected into the
interstellar medium within the first 109 years.
The choice of the power-law
index is of course crucial to the results. For a Salpeter IMF
( = 2.35)
about 20 % of the cluster's initial mass is re-injected into the ISM as gas in
10 Gyrs, while this fraction is as high as 60 % if
= 1.5.
3. Fate of the Gas |
Smith (1996) has derived criteria for the fate of the gas ejected by AGB stars in globular clusters, by comparing the stellar-ejecta speed to the cluster's escape speed. He has shown that using present-day parameters, many Galactic globular clusters are sufficiantly bound to retain this gas in the cluster's central regions, forming a reservoir of gas. The gas will accumulate in the cluster's center between passages through the galactic plane, at which time the cluster will be swept clean of the gas.
4. Accretion of Gas in Globular Clusters |
The gas in the cluster's core can be re-accreted by the cluster stars.
The accretion rate can in principle be easily calculated using Bondi's (1952)
formalism, as described in more details in Thoul & al. (2000).
The main difficulty lies in the evaluation of the parameters entering the
calculation, such as the initial mass spectrum, the globular cluster parameters
(size, mass, concentration,...) and dynamical evolution,
the energy sources (novae, hot stars,...),
the stellar dynamics in the cluster (masses, orbits, velocity, mass
segregation,...), the stellar composition, the AGB stellar mass loss rates,
the AGB stars ejecta properties (gas versus dust, velocity, temperature,
pressure, density) and chemical composition,...
Using "reasonable" values for these parameters, we were able to estimate
the amount of gas accretion in tightly bound globular clusters. We found that
in clusters such as 47Tuc and M15, the accretion can be very efficient, with up
to about 90 % of the gas being re-accreted. Most of the accretion takes place
at early times, i.e., during the first 109 years.
5. Conclusions |
A considerable fraction of the initial globular cluster's stellar mass is re-injected into the intracluster medium through AGB stellar mass loss. This gas can remain in the globular cluster's central regions, at least if the cluster is tightly bound. Some stars in the cluster will be able to accrete this gas. The total amount of accretion can be large in some cases. On the other hand, even a small amount of accretion will significantly affect the surface composition of main sequence stars. Observations of the chemical composition of those stars will reflect their surface composition, which can be different from their "real" chemical composition. This could explain the enrichment in s-process elements observed in mildly metal-poor field stars.
7. Figures |
Figure 1 |
Figure 2 |
Figure 3 |
Acknowledgements |
A. Thoul thanks the conference organizers and in particular F. D'Antona for the invitation to participate in this very interesting and pleasant workshop, as well as the other participants for many thought provoking chats over espresso coffee. This work has been supported by the P\^ole d'Attraction Interuniversitaire P4/05 (SSTC, Belgium) and by FRFC F6/15-OL-F63 (FNRS, Belgium).
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