Mass-losing M Supergiants in the Solar Neighborhood
Abstract
A list of the 21 mass-losing red supergiants (20 M type, one G type; L greater than 100,000 solar luminosities) within 2.5 kpc of the sun is compiled. These supergiants are highly evolved descendants of main-sequence stars with initial masses larger than 20 solar masses. The surface density is between about 1 and 2/sq kpc. As found previously, these stars are much less concentrated toward the Galactic center than W-R stars, which are also highly evolved massive stars. Although with considerable uncertainty, it is estimated that the mass return by the M supergiants is somewhere between 0.00001 and 0.00003 solar mass/sq kpc yr. In the hemisphere facing the Galactic center there is much less mass loss from M supergiants than from W-R stars, but, in the anticenter direction, the M supergiants return more mass than do the W-R stars. The duration of the M supergiant phase appears to be between 200,000 and 400,000 yr. During this phase, a star of initially at least 20 solar masses returns perhaps 3-10 solar masses into the interstellar medium.
- Publication:
-
The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series
- Pub Date:
- August 1990
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 1990ApJS...73..769J
- Keywords:
-
- M Stars;
- Red Giant Stars;
- Solar Neighborhood;
- Stellar Mass Ejection;
- Supergiant Stars;
- Spatial Distribution;
- Stellar Envelopes;
- Stellar Evolution;
- Stellar Luminosity;
- Wolf-Rayet Stars;
- Astrophysics;
- INTERSTELLAR: MATTER;
- STARS: MASS LOSS;
- STARS: STELLAR STATISTICS;
- STARS: SUPERGIANTS