Production of s-process elements in asymptotic giant branch stars as revealed by Gaia/GSP-Spec abundances
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Contursi, G.; de Laverny, P.; Recio Blanco, A.; Palicio, P. A.; Abia Ladrón De Guevara, Carlos AntonioEditorial
EDP Sciences
Materia
Galaxy: abundances Galaxy: disk Stars: evolution
Date
2024-03-15Referencia bibliográfica
G. Contursi, P. de Laverny, A. Recio-Blanco, P. A. Palicio and C. Abia. Production of s-process elements in asymptotic giant branch stars as revealed by Gaia/GSP-Spec abundances. A&A, 683 (2024) A138 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202347188
Sponsorship
European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under SPACEH2020 grant agreement number 101004214 (EXPLORE project); Centre National d’Études Spatiales (CNES); Project PID2021-123110NB-I00 financed by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033/FEDER, UE; Funding for the DPAC has been provided by national institutions, in particular the institutions participating in the Gaia Multilateral Agreement.Abstract
Context. The recent parameterisation by the GSP-Spec module of Gaia/Radial Velocity Spectrometer stellar spectra has produced an
homogeneous catalogue of about 174 000 asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars. Among the 13 chemical elements presented in this
Gaia third data release, the abundance of two of them (cerium and neodymium) have been estimated in most of these AGB stars.
These two species are formed by slow neutron captures (s-process) in the interior of low- and intermediate-mass stars. They belong
to the family of second-peak s-process elements.
Aims. We study the content and production rate of Ce and Nd in AGB stars, using the atmospheric parameters and chemical abundances
derived by the GSP-Spec module.
Methods. We defined a working sample of 19 544 AGB stars with high-quality Ce and/or Nd abundances, selected by applying a
specific combination of the GSP-Spec quality flags. We compared these abundances with the yield production predicted by AGB
evolutionary models.
Results. We first confirmed that the majority of the working sample is composed of AGB stars by estimating their absolute magnitude
in the K-band and their properties in a Gaia-2MASS diagram. We also checked that these stars are oxygen-rich AGB stars, as
assumed during the GSP-Spec parameterisation. We found a good correlation between the Ce and Nd abundances, confirming the
high quality of the derived abundances and that these species indeed belong to the same s-process family. We also found higher Ce
and Nd abundances for more evolved AGB stars of similar metallicity, illustrating the successive mixing episodes enriching the AGB
star surface in s-process elements formed deeper in their stellar interior. We then compared the observed Ce and Nd abundances with
the FRUITY and Monash AGB yields and found that the higher Ce and Nd abundances cannot be explained by AGB stars of masses
higher than 5 M⊙ . In contrast, the yields predicted by both models for AGB stars with an initial mass between ~1.5 and ~2.5 M⊙ and
metallicities between ~-0.5 and ~0.0 dex are fully compatible with the observed GSP-Spec abundances.
Conclusions. This work based on the largest catalogue of high-quality second-peak s-element abundances in oxygen-rich AGB stars
allows evolutionary models to be constrained and confirms the fundamental role played by low- and intermediate-mass stars in the
enrichment of the Universe in these chemical species.