SIMBAD references

2022ApJ...926..210R - Astrophys. J., 926, 210-210 (2022/February-3)

New Clues to the Evolution of Dwarf Carbon Stars From Their Variability and X-Ray Emission.

ROULSTON B.R., GREEN P.J., MONTEZ R., FILIPPAZZO J., DRAKE J.J., TOONEN S., ANDERSON S.F., ERACLEOUS M. and FRANK A.

Abstract (from CDS):

As main-sequence stars with C > O, dwarf carbon (dC) stars are never born alone but inherit carbon-enriched material from a former asymptotic giant branch (AGB) companion. In contrast to M dwarfs in post-mass-transfer binaries, C2 and/or CN molecular bands allow dCs to be identified with modest-resolution optical spectroscopy, even after the AGB remnant has cooled beyond detectability. Accretion of substantial material from the AGB stars should spin up the dCs, potentially causing a rejuvenation of activity detectable in X-rays. Indeed, a few dozen dCs have recently been found to have photometric variability with periods under a day. However, most of those are likely post-common-envelope binaries, spin-orbit locked by tidal forces, rather than solely spun-up by accretion. Here, we study the X-ray properties of a sample of the five nearest-known dCs with Chandra. Two are detected in X-rays, the only two for which we also detected short-period photometric variability. We suggest that the coronal activity detected so far in dCs is attributable to rapid rotation due to tidal locking in short binary orbits after a common-envelope phase, late in the thermally pulsing (TP) phase of the former C-AGB primary (TP-AGB).

Abstract Copyright: © 2022. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society.

Journal keyword(s): Carbon stars - Chemically peculiar stars - Binary stars - Close binary stars - Common envelope evolution - X-ray stars

Simbad objects: 8

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