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Technetium star
Type of celestial body
Type of celestial body
A technetium star, or more properly a Tc-rich star, is a star whose stellar spectrum contains absorption lines of the radioactive metal technetium. The most stable isotope of technetium is Tc with a half-life of 4.21 million years: too short a time to last for the age of the Earth (about 4.5 billion years). Therefore, the detection in 1952 of technetium in stellar spectra, was unambiguous proof of nucleosynthesis in stars, one of the more extreme cases being the star R Geminorum.
Stars containing technetium belong to the class of asymptotic giant branch stars (AGB)—stars that are like red giants, but with a slightly higher luminosity, and which burn hydrogen in an inner shell. Members of this class of stars switch to helium shell burning with an interval of some 100,000 years, in "dredge-ups". Technetium stars belong to the classes M, MS, S, SC and C-N. They are most often variable stars of the long period variable types.
Current research indicates that the presence of technetium in AGB stars occurs after some evolution and that a significant number of these stars do not exhibit the metal in their spectra. The presence of technetium seems to be related to the "third dredge-up" in the history of the stars. In between the thermal pulses of these RGB stars, heavy elements are formed in the region between the hydrogen and helium fusing shells via the slow neutron capture process; the s-process. The materials are then brought to the surface via deep convection events.
References
| display-authors=1 | journal=Astronomy and Astrophysics
References
- S. Paul W. Merrill. (1952). "Spectroscopic Observations of Stars of Class S". The Astrophysical Journal.
- T. Lebzelter. (2003). "Technetium and the third dredge up in AGB stars. I. Field stars". Astronomy & Astrophysics.
- (2003). "Technetium and the third dredge up in AGB stars. I. Field stars". Astronomy and Astrophysics.
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