Mass loss on the red giant branch: the value and metallicity dependence of Reimers' η in globular clusters

Abstract

The impact of metallicity on the mass-loss rate from red giant branch (RGB) stars is studied through its effect on the parameters of horizontal branch (HB) stars. The scaling factors from Reimers (1975) and Schroder & Cuntz (2005) are determined for 56 well-studied Galactic globular clusters (GCs). The median values among clusters are, respectively, ηR = 0.477 +/- 0.070 (+0.050/-0.062) and ηSC = 0.172 +/- 0.024 (+0.018/-0.023) (standard deviation and systematic uncertainties, respectively). Mass-loss mechanisms on the RGB have very little metallicity dependence: over a factor of 200 in iron abundance, η varies by <~30 per cent, within the current systematic uncertainties on cluster ages and evolution models. Since η incorporates cluster age, the low standard deviation of η among clusters (~14 per cent) suggests that age can almost entirely account for the "second parameter problem". The remaining spread in η correlates with cluster mass and density, suggesting helium enrichment provides the third parameter explaining HB morphology of GCs. The metallicity variation is reduced further if globular clusters are more co-eval than generally thought. This would also better reproduce the observed AGB tip luminosities, which are not well modelled by extrapolating the RGB η to later evolutionary epochs.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…