Aims. LTE abundances of light elements in extremely metal-poor (EMP) stars have been previously derived from high quality spectra. New derivations, free from the NLTE effects, will better constrain ...the models of the Galactic chemical evolution and the yields of the very first supernovae. Methods. The NLTE profiles of the magnesium and potassium lines have been computed in a sample of 53 extremely metal-poor stars with a modified version of the program MULTI and adjusted to the observed lines in order to derive the abundances of these elements. Results. The NLTE corrections for magnesium and potassium are in good agreement with the works found in the literature. The abundances are slightly changed, reaching a better precision: the scatter around the mean of the abundance ratios has decreased. Magnesium may be used with confidence as reference element. Together with previously determined NLTE abundances of sodium and aluminum, the new ratios are displayed, for comparison, along the theoretical trends proposed by some models of the chemical evolution of the Galaxy, using different models of supernovae.
We derived elemental abundances in 27 Cepheids, the great majority situated within a zone of Galactocentric distances ranging from 5 to 7 kpc. One star of our sample, SU Sct, has a Galactocentric ...distance of about 3 kpc, and thus falls in a poorly investigated region of the inner thin disc. Our new results, combined with data on abundances in the very central part of our Galaxy taken from the literature, show that iron, magnesium, silicon, sulphur, calcium and titanium local thermodynamic equilibrium abundance radial distributions, as well as non-local thermodynamic equilibrium distribution of oxygen reveal a plateau-like structure or even positive abundance gradient in the region extending from the Galactic Centre to about 5 kpc.
This paper reports on the spectroscopic investigation of 54 Cepheids, deriving parameters and abundances. These Cepheids extend previous samples by about 35% in number and increase the amount of the ...Galactic disk coverage, especially in the direction of l 120°. We find that there exists in the Galactic disk at that longitude and at a solar distance of about 3-4 kpc a region that has enhanced abundances, Fe/H +0.2, with respect to the local region. A simple linear fit to all Cepheid data now extant yields a gradient dFe/H/dRG = -0.068 ± 0.003 dex kpc-1. After consideration of the spatial abundance inhomogeneities in the sample, we conclude that the best current estimate of the overall gradient is dFe/H/dRG = -0.06 dex kpc-1.
We performed a non-local thermodynamic equilibrium (NLTE) analysis of the infrared oxygen triplet for a large number of Cepheid spectra obtained with the Hobby–Eberly Telescope. These data were ...combined with our previous NLTE results for stars observed with the Max Planck Gesellschaft Telescope with the aim of investigating the oxygen abundance distribution in the Galactic thin disc. We found the slope of the radial (O/H) distribution to be equal −0.058 dex kpc−1. However, we found some evidence that the distribution might become flatter in the outer parts of the disc. This is supported by the results of other authors who have studied open clusters, planetary nebulae and H ii regions. Some mechanisms of flattening are discussed.
Recently, several studies have shown that young, open clusters are characterized by a considerable overabundance in their barium content. In particular, D'Orazi et al. reported that in some younger ...clusters Ba/Fe can reach values as high as ∼0.6 dex. The work also identified the presence of an anticorrelation between Ba/Fe and cluster age. For clusters in the age range ∼4.5 Gyr-500 Myr, this is best explained by assuming a higher contribution from low-mass asymptotic giant branch stars to the Galactic chemical enrichment.
The purpose of this work is to investigate the ubiquity of the barium overabundance in young stellar clusters. We analysed high-resolution spectroscopic data, focusing on the s-process elemental abundance for three nearby young associations, i.e. AB Doradus, Carina-Near and Ursa Major. The clusters have been chosen such that their age spread would complement the D'Orazi et al. study.
We find that while the s-process elements Y, Zr, La and Ce exhibit solar ratios in all three associations, Ba is overabundant by ∼0.2 dex. Current theoretical models cannot reproduce this abundance pattern; thus, we investigate whether this unusually large Ba content might be related to chromospheric effects. Although no correlation between Ba/Fe and several activity indicators seems to be present, we conclude that different effects could be at work which may (directly or indirectly) be related to the presence of hot stellar chromospheres.
Context.Abundance ratios in extremely metal-poor (EMP) stars are a good indication of the chemical composition of the gas in the earliest phases of the Galaxy evolution. It had been found from ...an LTE analysis that at low metallicity, and in contrast with most of the other elements, the scatter of Na/Fe versus Fe/H was surprisingly large and that, in giants, Na/Fe decreased with metallicity. Aims.Since it is well-known that the formation of sodium lines is very sensitive to non-LTE effects, to firmly establish the behaviour of the sodium abundance in the early Galaxy, we have used high quality observations of a sample of EMP stars obtained with UVES at the VLT, and we have taken into account the non-LTE line formation of sodium. Methods.The profiles of the two resonant sodium D lines (only these sodium lines are detectable in the spectra of EMP stars) have been computed in a sample of 54 EMP giants and turn-off stars (33 of them with ${\rm Fe/H<-3.0}$) with a modified version of the code MULTI, and compared to the observed spectra. Results.With these new determinations in the range ${\rm -4 <Fe/H< -2.5}$, both Na/Fe and Na/Mg are almost constant with a low scatter. In the turn-off stars and “unmixed” giants (located in the low RGB): ${\rm Na/Fe} = -0.21$ ± 0.13 or ${\rm Na/Mg} = -0.45$ ± 0.16. These values are in good agreement with the recent determinations of Na/Fe and Na/Mg in nearby metal-poor stars. Moreover we confirm that all the sodium-rich stars are “mixed” stars (i.e., giants located after the bump, which have undergone an extra mixing). None of the turn-off stars is sodium-rich. As a consequence it is probable that the sodium enhancement observed in some mixed giants is the result of a deep mixing.
Context. Heavy element abundances in extremely metal-poor stars provide strong constraints on the processes of forming these elements in the first stars. Aims. We attempt to determine precise ...abundances of strontium in a homogeneous sample of extremely metal-poor stars. Methods. The abundance of strontium in 54 very or extremely metal-poor stars, was redetermined by abandoning the local thermodynamic equilibrium (LTE) hypothesis, and fitting non-LTE (NLTE) profiles to the observed spectral lines. The corrected Sr abundances and previously obtained NLTE Ba abundances are compared to the predictions of several hypothetical formation processes for the lighter neutron-capture elements. Results. Our NLTE abundances confirm the previously determined huge scatter of the strontium abundance in low metallicity stars. This scatter is also found (and is even larger) at very low metallicities (i.e. early in the chemical evolution). The Sr abundance in the extremely metal-poor (EMP) stars is compatible with the main r-process involved in other processes (or by variations of the r-process), as we briefly discuss.
Aims. Aluminium is a key element to constrain the models of the chemical enrichment and the yields of the first supernovae. But obtaining precise Al abundances in extremely metal-poor (EMP) stars ...requires that the non-LTE effects be carefully taken into account. Methods. The NLTE profiles of the blue resonance aluminium lines have been computed in a sample of 53 extremely metal-poor stars with a modified version of the program MULTI applied to an atomic model of the Al atom with 78 levels of Al I and 13 levels of Al II, and compared to the observations. Results. With these new determinations, all the stars of the sample show a ratio Al/Fe close to the solar value: Al/Fe =-0.06\pm0.10 with a very small scatter. These results are compared to the models of the chemical evolution of the halo using different models of SN II and are compatible with recent computations. The sodium-rich giants are not found to be also aluminium-rich and thus, as expected, the convection in these giants only brings to the surface the products of the Ne-Na cycle.
ABSTRACT
For the first time, we describe a detection of the emission in the infrared (IR) He i triplet at 10 830 Å in the classical Cepheid X Cyg. Emissions are clearly seen at phases approximately ...from 0.25 to 0.85. The IR redshifted He i emission is excited by shock wave in the uppermost layers of the star’s envelope, in its falling layers. This is a first detection of the helium IR emission in the classical Cepheids.
Context. The recent development of brand new observational techniques and theoretical models have greatly advanced the exoplanet research field. Despite significant achievements, which have allowed ...the detection of thousands extrasolar systems, a comprehensive understanding of planetary formation and evolution mechanisms is still desired. One relevant limitation is given by the accuracy in the measurements of planet-host star ages. The star GJ 504 has been found to host a substellar companion whose nature is strongly debated. There has been a recent difference of opinion in the literature owing to the uncertainty on the age of the system: a young age of ~160 Myr would imply a giant planet as a companion, but a recent revision pointing to a solar age (~4 Gyr) instead suggests a brown dwarf. Aims. With the aim of shedding light on this debated topic, we have carried out a high-resolution spectroscopic study of GJ 504 to derive stellar parameters, metallicity, and abundances of both light and heavy elements, providing a full chemical characterisation. The main objective is to infer clues on the evolutionary stage (hence the age) of this system. Methods. We performed a strictly differential (line-by-line) analysis of GJ 504 with respect to two reference stars, that is the planet-host dwarf ι Hor and the subgiant HIP 84827. The former is crucial in this context because its stellar parameters (hence the evolutionary stage) is well constrained from asteroseismic observations. Regardless of the zero point offsets, our differential approach allows us to put tight constraints on the age of GJ 504 with respect to ι Hor, thereby minimising the internal uncertainties. Results. We found that the surface gravity of GJ 504 is 0.2 ± 0.07 dex lower than that of the main-sequence star ι Hor, suggesting a past turn-off evolution for our target. The isochrone comparison provides us with an age range between 1.8 and 3.5 Gyr, with a most probable age of ≈2.5 Gyr. Thus, our findings support an old age for the system; further evidence comes from the barium abundance, which is compatible with a solar pattern and not enhanced as observed in young stars. Conclusions. We envisaged a possible engulfment scenario to reconcile all the age indicators (spectroscopy, isochrones, rotation, and activity); this engulfment could have occurred very recently and could be responsible for the enhanced levels of rotation and chromospheric activity, as previously suggested. We tested this hypothesis, exploiting a tidal evolution code and finding that the engulfment of a hot Jupiter, with mass not larger than ≈3 Mj and initially located at ≈0.03 AU, seems to be a very likely scenario.