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Cold Dust in Three Massive Evolved Stars in the LMC

Authors :
Boyer, M. L.
Sargent, B.
van Loon, J. Th.
Srinivasan, S.
Clayton, G. C.
Kemper, F.
Smith, L. J.
Matsuura, M.
Woods, Paul M.
Marengo, M.
Meixner, M.
Engelbracht, C.
Gordon, K. D.
Hony, S.
Indebetouw, R.
Misselt, K.
Okumura, K.
Panuzzo, P.
Riebel, D.
Roman-Duval, J.
Sauvage, M.
Sloan, G. C.
Boyer, M. L.
Sargent, B.
van Loon, J. Th.
Srinivasan, S.
Clayton, G. C.
Kemper, F.
Smith, L. J.
Matsuura, M.
Woods, Paul M.
Marengo, M.
Meixner, M.
Engelbracht, C.
Gordon, K. D.
Hony, S.
Indebetouw, R.
Misselt, K.
Okumura, K.
Panuzzo, P.
Riebel, D.
Roman-Duval, J.
Sauvage, M.
Sloan, G. C.
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

Massive evolved stars can produce large amounts of dust, and far-infrared (IR) data are essential for determining the contribution of cold dust to the total dust mass. Using Herschel, we search for cold dust in three very dusty massive evolved stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud: R71 is a Luminous Blue Variable, HD36402 is a Wolf-Rayet triple system, and IRAS05280-6910 is a red supergiant. We model the spectral energy distributions using radiative transfer codes and find that these three stars have mass-loss rates up to 10^-3 solar masses/year, suggesting that high-mass stars are important contributors to the life-cycle of dust. We found far-IR excesses in two objects, but these excesses appear to be associated with ISM and star-forming regions. Cold dust (T < 100 K) may thus not be an important contributor to the dust masses of evolved stars.<br />Comment: accepted to A&A as part of the Herschel first results special issue

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1363380092
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051.0004-6361.201014513