Abstract

The availability of multi-wavelength observations and parallaxes from the space missions and very comprehensive models of AGB evolution that include the accretion of matter from the circumbinary disc have strongly impacted our understanding of these enigmatic objects. The important developments made in the recent times are summarized here. The revised estimates of luminosities (derived from better-defined Spectral Energy Distributions (SEDs) and new distances from Gaia DR2) further support the opinion that RV Tauri stars contain a mixture of post-AGB stars and post-RGB stars. Their locations in HR diagram also indicate that the instability strip (IS) of RV Tauri stars have a broader extension in the cooler edge than that of classical Cepheids. A new P−L relation has been calibrated for the galactic Cepheids which have a steeper slope than that derived for the Population II Cepheids and RV Tauri stars in Magellanic clouds . The most significant chemical peculiarity exhibited by RV Tauri stars and other post-AGB stars is the selective depletion of refractory elements that correlates with their condensation temperatures. A large range in the size of depletion as well as in the shapes of the depletion curves has been observed. Earlier models to explain this effect were mostly qualitative. Recent investigators model these depletions using evolutionary codes (e.g. MESA) to evolve stars in the post-AGB phase, while including accretion of metal-poor gas from circumbinary disc. These authors model the accretion rate onto a the binary post-AGB star from a viscously evolving disc for a range of initial accretion rates and disc masses. It is reported that large initial accretion rates and disc masses are required to explain the large depletion and saturated depletion curve that could extend the evolution time of post-AGB star. It is also proposed that the unsaturated depletion curve (with a plateau) are likely to be caused by post-RGB stars.

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