The atmospheres of Carbon rich giants - from observations to models and back

Gioia Rau
Dep. Astrophysics, Univ. of Vienna


Carbon-rich AGB stars are important contributors to the enrichment of the interstellar medium, and in their spectra there are signs of carbon-bearing molecules such as C2, C3, C2H2, CN, or HCN, while the dust is mainly dominated by amorphous carbon dust grains and silicon carbide. Also, AGB stars are prominent members of stellar populations, and the most important contributors to the total flux emitted by galaxies containing populations of young/intermediate ages. Dynamic models for the atmospheres of C-rich Asymptotic Giant Branch stars are quite advanced and have been rather successful in reproducing spectroscopic and photometric observations. Interferometry provides independent information and thus an essential tool to study the atmospheric stratification and to further constrain the dynamic models. We present the first systematic comparison of a larger sample of C-rich Mira and semi-regular stars observed with VLTI/MIDI with synthetic photometry, spectroscopy and visibilities derived from dynamic model atmospheres (DMA, Eriksson et al. 2014). The SEDs can be reasonably well modelled, and the interferometry supports the extended and multi-component structure of the atmospheres, but some differences remain. The possible reasons for these differences and the stellar parameters derived from this comparison with stellar evolution models will be discussed. The high potential of MATISSE is underlined, as the second generation VLTI instrument allowing interferometric imaging in the L, M, and N bands, for further progress in this field.