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CATEGORIES:Seminars
DESCRIPTION:Abstract: Red giants and supergiants have large, tenuous envelopes that are gradually lost via winds. These winds are launched from a dense chromosphere supported by shock waves due to stellar pulsations and vigorous convection. The resulting mass loss is stochastic, episodic, and asymmetric, with profound consequences on stellar evolution. For exploding red supergiants, the dense chromosphere profoundly alters the early light curve and spectra of type II supernovae. For red giants in binaries, the chromosphere can overfill its Roche lobe before the photosphere does, creating larger mass transfer rates than predicted by standard stellar evolution models, greatly altering the outcome of mass transfer. Finally, episodic mass loss events impart small and randomly oriented kicks to AGB stars, and the combination of many events imparts a total kick of roughly 1 km/s to the resulting white dwarf. These kicks can unbind wide binaries, and in some cases can cause collisions between an AGB star and a companion star, likely leading to high-eccentricity common envelope events and unusual luminous red novae.&nbsp; 748850
DTSTAMP:20260627T174115
DTSTART:20260624T143000
DTEND:20260624T153000
LOCATION:Fourth floor interaction area, Physics Building, Streatham Campus
SUMMARY;LANGUAGE=en-us:Astro-Seminar: Jim Fuller - Boil-off of Luminous Red Giants: Mass Loss, Supernovae, and White Dwarf Kicks
UID:80aea73a3988beaca68d8db59a6f5407@www.exeter.ac.uk
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