Litcius/Paper detail

Is Thermohaline Mixing the Full Story? Evidence for Separate Mixing Events near the Red Giant Branch Bump

Jamie Tayar, Meridith Joyce

2022The Astrophysical Journal Letters20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The abundances of mixing-sensitive elements including lithium, [C/N], and 12 C/ 13 C are known to change near the red giant branch bump. The explanation most often offered for these alterations is double diffusive thermohaline mixing in the stellar interior. In this analysis, we investigate the ability of thermohaline mixing to explain the observed timing of these chemical depletion events. Recent observational measurements of lithium and [C/N] show that the abundance of lithium decreases before the abundance of [C/N], whereas numerical simulations of the propagation of the thermohaline-mixing region computed with MESA show that the synthetic abundances drop simultaneously. We therefore conclude that thermohaline mixing alone cannot explain the distinct events of lithium depletion and [C/N] depletion, as the simultaneity predicted by simulations is not consistent with the observation of separate drops. We thus invite more sophisticated theoretical explanations for the observed temporal separation of these chemical depletion episodes as well as more extensive observational explorations across a range of masses and metallicities.

Topics & Concepts

Mixing (physics)Thermohaline circulationLithium (medication)PhysicsDrop (telecommunication)Convective mixingAbundance (ecology)AstrophysicsGeologyClimatologyThermodynamicsConvectionComputer scienceEndocrinologyTelecommunicationsFisheryBiologyMedicineQuantum mechanicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studiesAstro and Planetary ScienceAstrophysics and Star Formation Studies
Is Thermohaline Mixing the Full Story? Evidence for Separate Mixing Events near the Red Giant Branch Bump | Litcius