The first measurements of carbon isotopic ratios in post-RGB stars: SZ Mon and DF Cyg. E-iSpec: A spectral analysis tool to derive elemental abundances and isotopic ratios for evolved stars
Dusty post-red giant branch (post-RGB) stars are low- and intermediate-mass stars where the RGB evolution was prematurely terminated by a poorly understood binary interaction. These binary stars are considered to be low-luminosity analogues of post-asymptotic giant branch (post-AGB) binary stars. In...
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Zusammenfassung: | Dusty post-red giant branch (post-RGB) stars are low- and intermediate-mass
stars where the RGB evolution was prematurely terminated by a poorly understood
binary interaction. These binary stars are considered to be low-luminosity
analogues of post-asymptotic giant branch (post-AGB) binary stars. In this
study, we investigated the chemical composition of two dusty post-RGB binary
stars, SZ Mon and DF Cyg, using multi-wavelength spectroscopic data from
HERMES/Mercator (optical) and the APOGEE survey (near-infrared). Owing to
challenges posed by existing spectral analysis tools for the study of evolved
stars with complex atmospheres, we developed E-iSpec: a dedicated spectral
analysis tool for evolved stars, to consistently determine atmospheric
parameters, elemental abundances, and carbon isotopic ratios. Our abundance
analysis revealed that observed depletion patterns and estimated depletion
efficiencies resemble those found in post-AGB binary stars. However, the onset
of chemical depletion in post-RGB targets occurs at higher condensation
temperatures ($T_{\rm turn-off, post-RGB}\approx1400$ K), than in most post-AGB
stars ($T_{\rm turn-off, post-AGB}\approx1100$ K). Additionally, our study
resulted in the first estimates of carbon isotopic ratios for post-RGB stars
($^{12}$C/$^{13}$C$_{\rm SZ Mon}=8\pm4$, $^{12}$C/$^{13}$C$_{\rm DF
Cyg}=12\pm3$). We found that the observationally derived CNO abundances and the
carbon isotopic ratios of our post-RGB binary targets are in good agreement
with theoretical predictions from the ATON single star evolutionary models
involving first dredge-up and moderately-deep extra mixing. This agreement
emphasises that in post-RGB binary targets, the observed CNO abundances reflect
the chemical composition expected from single star nucleosynthesis (i.e.,
convective and non-convective mixing processes) occurring during the RGB phase
before it is terminated. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2403.09999 |