The chemical composition of carbon stars. The R-type stars

Zamora, O.; Abia, C.; Plez, B.; Domínguez, I.; Cristallo, S.
Referencia bibliográfica

Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 508, Issue 2, 2009, pp.909-922

Fecha de publicación:
12
2009
Número de autores
5
Número de autores del IAC
0
Número de citas
52
Número de citas referidas
45
Descripción
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.