The effect of intermediate mass close binaries on the chemical evolution of Globular Clusters

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference paper

24 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The chemical processes during the Asymptotic Giant Branch (AGB) evolution of intermediate mass single stars predict most of the observations of the different populations in Globular Clusters although some important issues still need to be further clarified. In particular, to reproduce the observed anticorrelations of Na-O and Al-Mg, chemically enriched gas lost during the AGB phase of intermediate mass single stars must be mixed with matter with a pristine chemical composition. The source of this matter is still a matter of debate. Furthermore, observations reveal that a significant fraction of the intermediate mass and massive stars are born as components of close binaries. We will investigate the effects of binaries on the chemical evolution of Globular Clusters and on the origin of matter with a pristine chemical composition that is needed for the single star AGB scenario to work. We use a population synthesis code that accounts for binary physics in order to estimate the amount and the composition of the matter returned to the interstellar medium of a population of binaries. We demonstrate that the mass lost by a significant population of intermediate mass close binaries in combination with the single star AGB pollution scenario may help to explain the chemical properties of the different populations of stars in Globular Clusters.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationMemorie della Societa Astronomica Italiana
Pages1-1
Number of pages1
Volume543
Publication statusPublished - 28 Nov 2012
EventUnknown -
Duration: 28 Nov 2012 → …

Publication series

NameReading the book of globular clusters with the lens of stellar evolution

Conference

ConferenceUnknown
Period28/11/12 → …

Keywords

  • Binaries: close
  • Galaxies: clusters: general

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