APS March Meeting 2016
Volume 61, Number 2
Monday–Friday, March 14–18, 2016;
Baltimore, Maryland
Session S32: Chemical Physics of Extreme Environments I
11:15 AM–2:15 PM,
Thursday, March 17, 2016
Room: 332
Sponsoring
Unit:
DCP
Chair: Arthur Suits, University of Missouri
Abstract ID: BAPS.2016.MAR.S32.4
Abstract: S32.00004 : \textbf{The Extreme Chemical Environments Associated with Dying Stars}
12:39 PM–1:15 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Lucy Ziurys
(University of Arizona)
Mass loss from dying stars is the main avenue by which material enters the
interstellar medium, and eventually forms solar systems and planets. When
stars consume all the hydrogen burning in their core, they start to burn
helium, first in their centers, and then in a surrounding shell. During
these phases, the so-called ``giant branches,'' large instabilities are
created, and stars begin to shed their outer atmospheres, producing
so-called circumstellar envelopes. Molecules form readily in these
envelopes, in part by LTE chemistry at the base of the stellar photosphere,
and also by radical reactions in the outer regions. Eventually most stars
shed almost all their mass, creating ``planetary nebulae,'' which consist of
a hot, ultraviolet-emitting white dwarf surrounded by the remnant stellar
material. The environs in such nebulae are not conducive to chemical
synthesis; yet molecular gas exits. The ejecta from these nebulae then flows
into the interstellar medium, becoming the starting material for diffuse
clouds, which subsequently collapse into dense clouds and then stars. This
molecular ``life cycle'' is repeated many times in the course of the
evolution of our Galaxy.
We have been investigating the interstellar molecular life cycle, in
particular the chemical environments of circumstellar shells and planetary
nebulae, through both observational and laboratory studies. Using the
facilities of the Arizona Radio Observatory (ARO), we have conducted
broad-band spectral-line surveys to characterize the contrasting chemical
and physical properties of carbon (IRC$+$10216) vs. oxygen-rich envelopes
(VY CMa and NML Cyg). The carbon-rich types are clearly more complex in
terms of numbers of chemical compounds, but the O-rich variety appear to
have more energetic, shocked material. We have also been conducting surveys
of polyatomic molecules towards planetary nebulae. Species such as HCN,
HCO$^{\mathrm{+}}$, HNC, CCH, and H$_{\mathrm{2}}$CO appear to be common
constituents of these objects, and their abundances do not appear to vary
with age. These results contradict the predictions of all chemical models.
We have also been using millimeter-wave and Fourier transform microwave
methods to measure rotational spectra of potential new interstellar
molecules to complete the chemical inventories. The current results of these
studies will be presented.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2016.MAR.S32.4