Spitzer SAGE-Spec: Near infrared spectroscopy, dust shells, and cool envelopes in extreme large magellanic cloud asymptotic giant branch stars

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Abstract

K-band spectra are presented for a sample of 39 Spitzer Infrared Spectrograph (IRS) SAGE-Spec sources in the Large Magellanic Cloud. The spectra exhibit characteristics in very good agreement with their positions in the near-infrared - Spitzer color-magnitude diagrams and their properties as deduced from the Spitzer IRS spectra. Specifically, the near-infrared spectra show strong atomic and molecular features representative of oxygen-rich and carbon-rich asymptotic giant branch stars, respectively. A small subset of stars was chosen from the luminous and red extreme "tip" of the color-magnitude diagram. These objects have properties consistent with dusty envelopes but also cool, carbon-rich "stellar" cores. Modest amounts of dust mass loss combine with the stellar spectral energy distribution to make these objects appear extreme in their near-infrared and mid-infrared colors. One object in our sample, HV 915, a known post-asymptotic giant branch star of the RV Tau type, exhibits CO 2.3 μm band head emission consistent with previous work that demonstrates that the object has a circumstellar disk.

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Blum, R. D., Srinivasan, S., Kemper, F., Ling, B., & Volk, K. (2014). Spitzer SAGE-Spec: Near infrared spectroscopy, dust shells, and cool envelopes in extreme large magellanic cloud asymptotic giant branch stars. Astronomical Journal, 148(5). https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-6256/148/5/86

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