Modeling the progenitors of low-mass post-accretion binaries

Abstract

About half of the mass of all heavy elements with mass number A > 90 is formed through the slow neutron capture process (s-process), occurring in evolved asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars with masses ~1-6 M. The s-process can be studied by modeling the accretion of material from AGB stars onto binary barium (Ba), CH, and carbon-enhanced metal-poor (CEMP)-s stars. Comparing observationally derived surface parameters and 1D-LTE abundance patterns of s-process elements to theoretical binary accretion models, we aim to understand the formation of post-accretion systems. We explore the extent of dilution of the accreted material and describe the impact of convective mixing on the observed surface abundances. We compute a new grid of 2700 accretion models for low-mass post-accretion systems. A maximum-likelihood comparison determines the best fit models for observational samples of Ba, CH, and CEMP-s stars. We find consistent AGB donor masses in the mass range of 2-3 M across our sample of post-accretion binaries. We find the formation scenario for weak Ba stars is an AGB star transferring a moderate amount of mass (≤0.5 M) resulting in a ~2.0-2.5 M star. The strong Ba stars are best fit with lower final masses ~1.0-2.0 M, and significant accreted mass (≥0.5 M). The CH and CEMP-s stars display lower final masses (~1.0 M) and small amounts of transferred material (~0.1 M). We find that Ba stars generally accrete more material than CEMP-s and CH stars. We also find that strong Ba stars must accrete more than 0.50 M to explain their abundance patterns, and in this limit we are unable to reproduce the observed mass distribution of strong Ba stars. The mass distributions of the weak Ba stars, CEMP-s, and CH stars are well reproduced in our modeling.

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