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Carbon star formation as seen through the non-monotonic initial-final mass relation

Authors :
Marigo, Paola
Cummings, Jeffrey D.
Curtis, Jason Lee
Kalirai, Jason
Chen, Yang
Tremblay, Pier-Emmanuel
Ramirez-Ruiz, Enrico
Bergeron, Pierre
Bladh, Sara
Bressan, Alessandro
Girardi, Leo
Pastorelli, Giada
Trabucchi, Michele
Cheng, Sihao
Aringer, Bernhard
Tio, Piero Dal
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The initial-final mass relation (IFMR) links the birth mass of a star to the mass of the compact remnant left at its death. While the relevance of the IFMR across astrophysics is universally acknowledged, not all of its fine details have yet been resolved. A new analysis of a few carbon-oxygen white dwarfs in old open clusters of the Milky Way led us to identify a kink in the IFMR, located over a range of initial masses, $1.65 \lesssim M_{\rm i}/M_{\odot} \lesssim 2.10$. The kink's peak in WD mass of $\approx 0.70-0.75 \, M_{\odot}$ is produced by stars with $M_{\rm i} \simeq 1.8 - 1.9 \, M_{\odot}$, corresponding to ages of about $1.8 - 1.7 $ Gyr. Interestingly, this peak coincides with the initial mass limit between low-mass stars that develop a degenerate helium core after central hydrogen exhaustion, and intermediate-mass stars that avoid electron degeneracy. We interpret the IFMR kink as the signature of carbon star formation in the Milky Way. This finding is critical to constraining the evolution and chemical enrichment of low-mass stars, and their impact on the spectrophotometric properties of galaxies.<br />Comment: Authors' version of the main article (43 pages) and Supplementary Information (12 pages) combined into a single pdf (55 pages). The Nature Astronomy published article is available at this url: https://www.nature.com/articles/s41550-020-1132-1

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2007.04163
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41550-020-1132-1