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.
CITATION STYLE
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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