Circumstellar Silicate Mineralogy
Abstract
This paper reviews spectra obtained with the SWS on board of ISO of dust shells around O-rich objects. These spectra reveal the presence of many new emission features between 10 and 45 µm. These bands are generally much narrower than the well-known 10 and 20 µm silicates features. The strength of these features relative to the underlying broad continuum varies from source to source (≅ 5-50%). The 10 µm region shows evidence for the presence of Al2O3 grains. At longer wavelength, the spectra are dominated by features due to crystalline olivine and pyroxene. The exact peak position of these features shows that the emitting grains consist of the Mg-rich end-members of these minerals with an Fe-content of < 10%. The underlying continuum is attributed to amorphous silicate grains. These observations of aluminum-rich and magnesium-rich compounds compare well with the thermodynamic condensation sequence of minerals expected for O-rich outflows. The observations also imply that freeze out (ie., kinetics) of this condensation sequence at different temperatures is an important characteristic of dust formation in these objects. It is suggested that the absence of Fe-rich silicates is a natural consequence of the low temperature at which gaseous Fe reacts with Mg-rich silicates in these outflows, resulting in amorphous grains with little characterizing spectral detail.
- Publication:
-
Astrophysics and Space Science
- Pub Date:
- 1998
- DOI:
- 10.1023/A:1001585120472
- Bibcode:
- 1998Ap&SS.255..415T