Search for Extremely Metal-poor Stars with Gemini-N/Graces. I. Chemical-abundance Analysis

  • Jeong M
  • Lee Y
  • Beers T
  • et al.
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Abstract

We present stellar parameters and abundances of 13 elements for 18 very metal-poor (VMP; [Fe/H] < 0. Although chemical abundances of our VMP/EMP stars generally follow the overall trend of other Galactic halo stars, there are a few exceptions. One Na-rich star ([Na/Fe] = +1.14) with low [Mg/Fe] suggests a possible chemical connection with second-generation stars in a globular cluster. The progenitor of an extremely Na-poor star ([Na/Fe] = –1.02) with high K- and Ni-abundance ratios may have undergone a distinct nucleosynthesis episode, associated with core-collapse supernovae (SNe) having a high explosion energy. We have also found a Mg-rich star ([Mg/Fe] = +0.73) with slightly enhanced Na and extremely low [Ba/Fe], indicating that its origin is not associated with neutron-capture events. On the other hand, the origin of the lowest Mg abundance ([Mg/Fe] = –0.61) star could be explained by accretion from a dwarf galaxy, or formation in a gas cloud largely polluted by SNe Ia. We have also explored the progenitor masses of our EMP stars by comparing their chemical-abundance patterns with those predicted by Population III SNe models, and find a mass range of 10–26 M ⊙ , suggesting that such stars were primarily responsible for the chemical enrichment of the early Milky Way.

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Jeong, M., Lee, Y. S., Beers, T. C., Placco, V. M., Kim, Y. K., Koo, J.-R., … Yang, S.-C. (2023). Search for Extremely Metal-poor Stars with Gemini-N/Graces. I. Chemical-abundance Analysis. The Astrophysical Journal, 948(1), 38. https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/acc58a

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