Free access article
| Issue |
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A&A
Volume 390,
Number 3,
August II 2002
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Page(s)
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987 - 999 |
| Section |
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Formation, structure and evolution of stars |
| DOI |
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10.1051/0004-6361:20020526 |
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A&A 390, 987-999 (2002)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20020526
The pulsation modes and masses of carbon-rich long period variables
J. Bergeat, A. Knapik and B. Rutily Centre de Recherche Astronomique de Lyon (UMR 5574 du CNRS),
Observatoire de Lyon, 9 avenue Charles André, 69561 St-Genis-Laval cedex, France
(Received 12 March 2002 / Accepted 15 March 2002 )
Abstract
Following our study of the carbon-rich giants in the HR diagram and of their luminosity function
(Paper III), we investigate the pulsation data of the long period variables (LPVs) included in our
sample.
Pulsation modes (fundamental, overtone(s)) for carbon LPVs are identified in the period-radius
diagram, making use of observed bi-periodicity in a small subsample of those stars, and of
comparison to models. Mean pulsation masses are then deduced from theoretical PMR-relations, with
due attention paid to a possible bias while averaging.
Mean (present) pulsation masses

are found to increase
along the group sequence HC5 to CV6, with still larger masses possibly associated with cool extreme
CV7-objects with strong mass loss and thick circumstellar shells. This is consistent with the
0.8-

range of initial masses found in Paper III for the majority of
carbon-rich giants affected by mass loss during their evolution. The pulsation masses found
for a few HC-stars

are consistent with their low initial masses

as inferred from their thick disk membership (age

?) and locus in the HR diagram. A mean pulsation mass of

is found for the three population II Cepheids in the sample.
A mass-luminosity diagram is proposed for the Galactic carbon giants. The data from observations
is found consistent with theoretical predictions from AGB modeling, specially the third dredge-up
(TDU) through thermal pulses (TP) with a carbon star formation line (CSFL) for TP-AGB stars.
It appears that the CV-giants are close to the tip and end of their evolutionary tracks in the
TP-AGB of the HR diagram. It is confirmed that this end shifts toward lower effective temperatures
and higher luminosities, with increasing masses.
It is shown that the C/O abundance ratios do correlate with effective temperatures,
according to
three distinct distributions (halo CH stars, thick disk HC-stars, and thin disk CV-stars). The
mean stellar density decreases along the HC5-CV7 sequence, while the surface gravity remains
nearly constant at about 0.5 CGS unit

The nature of (thin disk) CV-stars as TP-AGB objects being confirmed, the discussion is focused on
(thick disk) HC-stars since the origin of these old low-mass giants remains unclear. Unpredicted
extra mixing on RGB and/or E-AGB is favored. Evolution from (old, low O/H) dwarf carbon stars is
also considered since observations of metal-poor stars and recent calculations point to large
supersolar
![$\rm {\left[C/Fe\right]}$](/articles/aa/abs/2002/30/aa2463/img9.gif)
ratios in Population III objects and contamination through
rapid cycling in the interstellar medium.
Key words: stars: AGB and post-AGB
-- stars: carbon
-- stars: late-type
--
stars: fundamental parameters
-- stars:
Hertzsprung-Russell (HR) and C-M diagrams
--
stars: luminosity function, mass function
Offprint request: J. Bergeat,
bergeat@obs.univ-lyon1.fr
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© ESO 2002
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