Skip to header Skip to main navigation Skip to main content Skip to footer

website of the Royal Observatory of Belgium

Home
Astronomy & Astrophysics

Main navigation

  • Home
  • Topics
    • Binary Stars
    • Massive Stars
      • 3-D Radiative Transfer Modelling
      • Colliding Winds
      • Hypergiants
      • Stellar Winds
    • Stellar Evolution
      • AGB Stars
      • Nebulae
    • Stellar Evolution
    • Stellar Rotation
    • Variable Stars
  • Projects
    • BINA
    • BISTRO
    • BRASS
    • Cloudy
    • Gaia
      • Gaia @ ROB
      • Gaia-ESO
      • Radial Velocities
    • HOACS
    • Hermes
    • LOK
    • MESS
    • MolPlan
      • MolPlan
      • Sakurai's Object
    • RUSTICCA
    • STARLAB
    • VMC
    • digit
  • Staff
  • Papers
  • Press Releases
  • Data and Codes
  • Meetings
  • Jobs
  • Outreach
    • Carte du Ciel
    • Posters
    • Refractor

Characterization of M-stars in the LMC in the JWST era

04-2020

Marini, E.;  Dell'Agli, F.; Di Criscienzo, M.; García-Hernández, D. A.; Ventura, P.; Groenewegen, M. A. T.; et al

Characterization of M-stars in the LMC in the JWST era

 

Abstract :

We study the M-type asymptotic giant branch (AGB) population of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) by characterizing the individual sources in terms of the main properties of the progenitors and of the dust present in the circumstellar envelope. To this aim we compare the combination of the spectroscopic and photometric data collected by Spitzer, complemented by additional photometric results available in the literature, with results from AGB modelling that include the description of dust formation in the wind. To allow the interpretation of a paucity stars likely evolving through the post-AGB phase, we extended the available evolutionary sequences to reach the PN phase. The main motivation of the present analysis is to prepare the future observations of the evolved stellar populations of Local Group galaxies that will be done by the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), by identifying the combination of filters that will maximize the possibilities of characterizing the observed sources. The present results show that for the M-star case the best planes to be used for this purpose are the colour magnitude ([F770W]-[F2550W], [F770W]) and (KS-[F770W], [F770W]) planes. In these observational diagrams the sequences of low-mass stars evolving in the AGB phases before the achievement of the C-star stage and of massive AGBs experiencing hot bottom burning are clearly separated and peculiar sources, such as post-AGB, dual-dust chemistry, and iron-dust stars can be easily identified.

 

Publication : Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 493, Issue 2, p.2996-3013
DOI : 10.1093/mnras/staa353 
arXiv : arXiv:2002.01795 
Bibcode : 2020MNRAS.493.2996M 
Keywords : stars: abundances; stars: AGB and post-AGB; Magellanic Clouds; Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics; Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies

Powered by Drupal

administration

  • Log in

Legal Notices

  • Legal Notices

Copyright © 2026 Royal Observatory of Belgium - All rights reserved

OD3@ROB