Bibcode
Zamora, O.; Abia, C.; Plez, B.; Domínguez, I.; Cristallo, S.
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 508, Issue 2, 2009, pp.909-922
Advertised on:
12
2009
Journal
Citations
52
Refereed citations
45
Description
Aims. The aim of this work is to shed some light on the problem of the
formation of carbon stars of R-type from a detailed study of their
chemical composition. Methods: We use high-resolution and high
signal-to-noise optical spectra of 23 R-type stars (both early- and
late-types) selected from the Hipparcos catalogue. The chemical analysis
is made using spectral synthesis in LTE and state-of-the-art carbon-rich
spherical model atmospheres. We derive their CNO content (including the
12C/13C ratio), average metallicity, lithium, and
light (Sr, Y, Zr) and heavy (Ba, La, Nd, Sm) s-element abundances. The
observed properties of the stars (galactic distribution, kinematics,
binarity, photometry and luminosity) are also discussed. Results:
Our analysis shows that late-R stars are carbon stars with identical
chemical and observational characteristics as the normal (N-type) AGB
carbon stars. The s-element abundance pattern derived can be reproduced
by low-mass AGB nucleosynthesis models where the 13C(α,
n)16O reaction is the main neutron donor. We confirm the
results of the sole previous abundance analysis of early-R stars, namely
that they are carbon stars with near solar metallicity showing enhanced
nitrogen, low 12C/13C ratios and no s-element
enhancements. In addition, we have found that early-R stars have Li
abundances larger than expected for post RGB tip giants. We also find
that a significant number (~40%) of the early-R stars in our sample are
wrongly classified, probably being classical CH stars and normal K
giants. Conclusions: On the basis of the chemical analysis, we
confirm the previous suggestion that late-R stars are just misclassified
N-type carbon stars in the AGB phase of evolution. Their photometric,
kinematic, variability and luminosity properties are also compatible
with this. In consequence, we suggest that the number of true R stars is
considerably lower than previously believed. This alleviates the problem
of considering R stars as a frequent stage in the evolution of low-mass
stars. We briefly discuss the different scenarios proposed for the
formation of early-R stars. The mixing of carbon during an anomalous
He-flash is favoured, although no physical mechanism able to trigger
that mixing has been found yet. The origin of these stars still remains
a mystery.