Obscured Asymptotic Giant Branch stars in the Magellanic Clouds III. New IRAS counterparts
Astron.Astrophys.325:585-600,1997 We have searched for near-infrared stellar counterparts of IRAS point sources in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), in J and K-bands. This resulted in the detection of 21 counterparts, of which 19 are new discoveries. Using colour-magnitude and colour-colour diagrams...
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Zusammenfassung: | Astron.Astrophys.325:585-600,1997 We have searched for near-infrared stellar counterparts of IRAS point sources
in the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC), in J and K-bands. This resulted in the
detection of 21 counterparts, of which 19 are new discoveries. Using
colour-magnitude and colour-colour diagrams, we identify 13 Asymptotic Giant
Branch (AGB) stars with thick circumstellar dust envelopes, 7 possible early
post-AGB stars or stars recovering from a thermal pulse, and 1 red supergiant
or foreground star. For 10 of the IRAS targets we do not succeed in detecting
and/or identifying a near-infrared counterpart. We serendipitously detect 14
other red sources, of which 2 are known Long Period Variables, and a few
galaxies. The near-infrared and optical colours of the galaxies may indicate
considerable interstellar extinction through the LMC, as much as A_V about 2-4
mag. The relative number of AGB carbon stars over oxygen stars is shown to
decrease as the luminosity increases. Yet amongst the faintest mass-losing AGB
stars oxygen-rich stars still exist, which puts constraints on current
convection theories that predict the occurrence of third dredge-up and Hot
Bottom Burning. We investigate the nature of some LMC stars that have infrared
properties very similar to suspected Galactic post-AGB stars. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.astro-ph/9704201 |