4.6 Article

The pre- versus post-main sequence evolutionary phase of B[e] stars Constraints from (CO)-C-13 band emission

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 494, Issue 1, Pages 253-262

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:200811020

Keywords

stars: early-type; stars: atmospheres; stars: mass-loss; stars: winds, outflows; circumstellar matter

Funding

  1. NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)
  2. SIMBAD database
  3. GAAV CR [KJB300030701]

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Context. Many galactic B[e] stars suffer from improper distance determinations, which make it difficult to distinguish between a pre- and post-main sequence evolutionary phase on the basis of luminosity arguments. In addition, these stars have opaque circumstellar material, obscuring the central star, so that no detailed surface abundance studies can be performed. Aims. Instead of studying the surface abundances as a tracer of the evolutionary phase, we propose a different indicator for the supergiant status of a B[e] star, based on the enrichment of its circumstellar matter by C-13, and detectable via its (CO)-C-13 band emission in the K band spectra. Methods. Based on stellar evolution models, we calculate the variation of the C-12/C-13 isotopic surface abundance ratio during the evolution of non-rotating stars with different initial masses. For different values of the C-12/C-13 ratio we then compute synthetic first-overtone vibration-rotational band spectra from both the (CO)-C-12 and (CO)-C-13 molecule at different spectral resolutions. We further discuss the influence of stellar rotation on the variation of the surface C-12/C-13 ratio and on the possibility of (CO)-C-13 band detection. Results. The surface C-12/C-13 isotope ratio is found to decrease strongly during the post-main sequence evolution of non-rotating stars, from its interstellar value of about 70 to a value of about 15-20 for stars with initial masses higher than 7 M-circle dot, and to a value of less than 5 for stars with initial masses higher than 25 M-circle dot. We find that detectable (CO)-C-13 band head emission is produced for isotope ratios C-12/C-13 less than or similar to 20, and can most easily be detected with a spectral resolution of R similar to 1500 ... 3000. For the rotating stellar models, the drop in C-12/C-13 already occurs for all stars with M-in greater than or similar to 9 M-circle dot during the main-sequence evolution. The detection of (CO)-C-13 band head emission in such mid-resolution K band spectra of a B[e] star thus favours an evolved rather than a young nature of the object.

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