2020
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/201936831
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Properties of carbon stars in the solar neighbourhood based on Gaia DR2 astrometry

Abstract: Context. Stars evolving along the Asymptotic Giant Branch can become carbon-rich in the final part of their evolution. The detailed description of their spectra has led to the definition of several spectral types, namely: N, SC, J and R types. Up to now, differences among them have been partially established only on the basis of their chemical properties.Aims. An accurate determination of the luminosity function (LF) and kinematics together with their chemical properties is extremely important for testing the … Show more

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Cited by 33 publications
(35 citation statements)
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References 133 publications
(211 reference statements)
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“…This means that they are largely out of the Galactic disc, and thus we consider them to be in the halo. Our distances imply heights from the Galactic plane of between 10 and 26 kpc, much larger than 1 kpc seen for cool C stars of the disc (Abia et al 2020).…”
Section: Starsmentioning
confidence: 48%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…This means that they are largely out of the Galactic disc, and thus we consider them to be in the halo. Our distances imply heights from the Galactic plane of between 10 and 26 kpc, much larger than 1 kpc seen for cool C stars of the disc (Abia et al 2020).…”
Section: Starsmentioning
confidence: 48%
“…If this star is similar to solar-metallicity, cool C stars of the solar neighbourhood, with a Gaia-based distance, then M Ks ≈ −8.5 ± 0.8 from Fig. 11 of Abia et al (2020). If it is similar to carbon stars of the more metal-poor Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC), we obtain a very similar estimate, M Ks ≈ −8.60 by applying the period-luminosity relation 2 .…”
Section: Starsmentioning
confidence: 65%
“…Accordingly, a solar-calibrated value of the mixing length parameter α ml = 1.86 was adopted (see for more details). Regarding the mass-loss rate, we adopted a Reimers formula with η = 0.4 for the pre-AGB evolution and the rate used by Abia et al (2020) for the AGB phase (this rate is slightly different from that of Straniero et al 2006 because they adopted recalculated bolometric corrections).…”
Section: Stellar Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The bolometric magnitude of the model is then calculated by applying a bolometric correction (BC K ) as a function of the effective temperature (T eff ). In new FRUITY models, we adopt a new fit given by Abia et al [58], who considered an updated T eff dataset of O-rich red giants from Buzzoni et al [59] and a new BC K vs. T eff relation.…”
Section: Input Physicsmentioning
confidence: 99%