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We present a review of nucleosynthesis in AGB stars outlining the
development of theoretical models and their relationship to observations. We
focus on the new high resolution codes with improved opacities, which recently
succeeded in accounting for the third dredge-up. This opens the possibility of
understanding low luminosity C stars (enriched in s-elements) as the
normal outcome of AGB evolution, characterized by production of 12C
and neutron-rich nuclei in the He intershell and by mass loss from strong
stellar winds. Neutron captures in AGB stars are driven by two reactions:
13C(α,n)16O, which provides the bulk of the neutron
flux at low neutron densities (Nn ≤ 107
n/cm3), and 22Ne(α,n)25Mg, which is
mildly activated at higher temperatures and mainly affects the production of
s-nuclei depending on reaction branchings. The first reaction is now
known to occur in the radiative interpulse phase, immediately below the region
previously homogenized by third dredge-up. The second reaction occurs during
the convective thermal pulses. The resulting nucleosynthesis phenomena are
rather complex and rule out any analytical approximation (exponential
distribution of neutron fluences). Nucleosynthesis in AGB stars, modeled at
different metallicities, account for several observational constraints, coming
from a wide spectrum of sources: evolved red giants rich in s-elements,
unevolved stars at different metallicities, presolar grains recovered from
meteorites, and the abundances of s-process isotopes in the solar
system. In particular, a good reproduction of the solar system main component
is obtained as a result of Galactic chemical evolution that mixes the outputs
of AGB stars of different stellar generations, born with different
metallicities and producing different patterns of s-process nuclei. The
main solar s-process pattern is thus not considered to be the result of
a standard archetypal s-process occurring in all stars. Concerning the
13C neutron source, its synthesis requires penetration of small
amounts of protons below the convective envelope, where they are captured by
the abundant 12C forming a 13C-rich pocket. This
penetration cannot be modeled in current evolutionary codes, but is treated as
a free parameter. Future hydrodynamical studies of time dependent mixing will
be required to attack this problem. Evidence of other insufficiencies in the
current mixing algorithms is common throughout the evolution of low and
intermediate mass stars, as is shown by the inadequacy of stellar models in
reproducing the observations of CNO isotopes in red giants and in circumstellar
dust grains. These observations require some circulation of matter between the
bottom of convective envelopes and regions close to the H-burning shell (cool
bottom processing). AGB stars are also discussed in the light of their possible
contribution to the inventory of short-lived radioactivities that were found to
be alive in the early solar system. We show that the pollution of the
protosolar nebula by a close-by AGB star may account for concordant abundances
of 26Al, 41Ca, 60Fe, and 107Pd. The
AGB star must have undergone a very small neutron exposure, and be of small
initial mass
().
There is a shortage of 26Al in such models, that however remains
within the large uncertainties of crucial reaction rates. The net
26Al production problem requires further investigation.
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