363 research outputs found
Tracing mixing in stars: new beryllium observations of the open clusters NGC 2516, Hyades, and M67
Determinations of beryllium abundance in stars, together with lithium,
provide a key tool to investigate the so far poorly understood extra-mixing
processes at work in stellar interiors. We measured Be in three open
clusters,complementing existing Be surveys, and aiming at gathering a more
complete empirical scenario of the evolution of Be as a function of stellar age
and temperature. Specifically, we analyzed VLT/UVES spectra of members of NGC
2516, the Hyades, and M 67 to determine their Be and Li abundances. In the
first two clusters we focused on stars cooler than 5400 K, while the M 67
sample includes stars warmer than 6150 K, as well as two subgiants and two blue
stragglers. We also computed the evolution of Be for a 0.9 Mo star based on
standard evolutionary models. We find different emprical behaviours for stars
in different temperature bins and ages. Stars warmer than 6150 K show Be
depletion and follow a Be vs. Li correlation while Be is undepleted in stars in
the ~6150-5600 K range. NGC 2516 members cooler than 5400 K have not depleted
any Be, but older Hyades of similar temperature do show some depletion. Be is
severely depleted in the subgiants and blue stragglers. The results for warm
stars are in agreement with previous studies, supporting the hypothesis that
mixing in this temperature regime is driven by rotation. The same holds for the
two subgiants that have evolved from the "Li gap". This mechanism is instead
not the dominant one for solar-type stars. We show that Be depletion of cool
Hyades cannot simply be explained by the effect of increasing depth of the
convective zone. Finally, the different Be content of the two blue stragglers
suggests that they have formed by two different processes (i.e., collisions vs.
binary merging).Comment: 19 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Beryllium anomalies in solar-type field stars
We present a study of beryllium (Be) abundances in a large sample of field
solar-type dwarfs and sub-giants spanning a large range of effective
temperatures. The analysis shows that Be is severely depleted for F stars, as
expected by the light-element depletion models. However, we also show that
Beryllium abundances decrease with decreasing temperature for stars cooler than
6000 K, a result that cannot be explained by current theoretical models
including rotational mixing, but that is, at least in part, expected from the
models that take into account internal wave physics. In particular, the light
element abundances of the coolest and youngest stars in our sample suggest that
Be, as well as lithium (Li), has already been burned early during their
evolution. Furthermore, we find strong evidence for the existence of a Be-gap
for solar-temperature stars. The analysis of Li and Be abundances in the
sub-giants of our sample also shows the presence of one case that has still
detectable amounts of Li, while Be is severely depleted. Finally, we compare
the derived Be abundances with Li abundances derived using the same set of
stellar parameters. This gives us the possibility to explore the temperatures
for which the onset of Li and Be depletion occurs.Comment: 16 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Lithium evolution in intermediate age and old open clusters: NGC 752 revisited
We present new high resolution spectroscopic observations of the intermediate
age (~2 Gyr) open cluster NGC 752. We investigate the Li vs. Teff distribution
and we obtain a new accurate determination of the cluster metallicity. We
compare the results for NGC 752 with other intermediate age and old clusters
spanning the age range from the Hyades (~0.6 Gyr) to NGC 188 (~6-8 Gyr). We
find that NGC 752 has a solar iron content ([Fe/H]=+0.01+/-0.04), at variance
with early reports of sub-solar metallicity. We find that NGC 752 is only
slightly more Li depleted than the younger Hyades and has a Li pattern almost
identical to that observed in the ~2 Gyr old IC 4651 and NGC 3680. As for the
latter clusters, we find that NGC 752 is characterized by a tight Li vs. Teff
distribution for solar-type stars, with no evidence for a Li spread as large as
the one observed in the solar age solar metallicity M 67. We discuss these
results in the framework of mixing mechanisms and Li depletion on the main
sequence (MS). We conclude that the development of a large scatter in Li
abundances in old open clusters might be an exception rather than the rule
(additional observations of old clusters are required), and that metallicity
variations of the order of ~0.2 dex do not affect Li depletion after the age of
the Hyades.Comment: A&A accepted, 10 pages, 5 ps figure
Angular Momentum Transport by Internal Gravity Waves. I - Pop I Main Sequence Stars
We examine the generation of gravity waves by the surface convection zone of
low-mass main sequence stars with solar metallicity. It is found that the total
momentum luminosity in waves rises with stellar mass, up to the
quasi-disappearance of the convection zone around 6500K (corresponding to a
mass of about 1.4 Msun for solar metallicity) where the luminosity drastically
drops. We calculate the net momentum extraction associated with these waves and
explain how the calculated mass dependence helps resolve the enigma of the Li
dip in terms of rotational mixing, forming a coherent picture of mixing in all
main sequence stars.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&
Oxygen in Unevolved Metal-Poor Stars from Keck Ultraviolet HIRES Spectra
The determination of the abundance of oxygen (O) is important in our understanding of mass–spectrum of previous generations of stars, the evolution of the Galaxy, stellar evolution, and the age-metallicity relation. We have measured O in 24 unevolved stars with Keck HIRES observations of the OH lines in the ultraviolet spectral region at a spectral resolution of ~45,000. The spectra have high signal-to-noise ratios, typically 60–110, and high dispersion, 0.022 Å per pixel. Very special care has been taken in determining the stellar parameters in a consistent way and we have done this for two different, plausible temperature scales. The O abundance from OH has been computed by spectrum synthesis techniques for all 24 stars plus the Sun for which we have a Keck spectrum of the daytime sky. In addition, we determined O abundances from the O I triplet with our stellar parameters and the published equivalent widths of the three O I lines from six sources. The comparison of data analyzed with the same, consistently determined, parameter sets show generally excellent agreement in the O abundances; differences in the origin of the models (not the parameters) may result in abundance differences of 0.07 to 0.11 dex. We show that the O abundances from OH and from O I are reliable and independent and average the two for the adopted O. This averaging has the great benefit of neutralizing uncertainties in the parameters since OH and O I strengths depend on effective temperature and gravity in opposite directions. For these cool, unevolved stars we find that O is enhanced relative to Fe with a completely linear relation between [O/H] and [Fe/H] over 3 orders of magnitude with very little scatter; taking the errors into account in determining the fits, we find [O/H] = +0.66 (±0.02) [Fe/H] + 0.05 (±0.04). The O abundances from 76 disk stars of Edvardsson et al. have a measured slope of 0.66 (identical to our halo dwarf stars) and fit this relationship smoothly. The relation between [O/Fe] and [Fe/H] is robustly linear and shows no sign of a break at metallicities between -1.0 and -2.0, as has been discussed by others. At low metallicities, [Fe/H] \u3c -3.0, [O/Fe] \u3e +1.0. The fit to this relationship (taking the errors into account) is [O/Fe] = -0.35 (±0.03) [Fe/H] + 0.03 (±0.05). The enrichment of O is probably still from massive stars and Type II supernovae; however, the absence of a break in [O/Fe] versus [Fe/H] runs counter to traditional galactic evolution models, and the interplay of Type II and Type Ia supernovae in the production of O and Fe should be reexamined. It appears that either Fe or O can be used as a chronometer in studies of galactic evolution
Mixing at young ages: Beryllium abundances in cool main-sequence stars of the open clusters IC 2391 and IC 2602
The determination of lithium abundances in stars of young clusters have shown
that they deplete Li by different degrees during their pre-main sequence phase.
Beryllium abundances are complementary to the lithium ones, and can help
tracing the mixing processes in the stellar interiors. Our aim is to derive
beryllium abundances in a sample of G- and K-type stars of two young pre-main
sequence open clusters, IC 2391 and IC 2602. The Be abundances are used to
investigate the mixing of internal material in these stars. The reliability of
the Be lines as abundance indicators in low-temperatures is also investigated
in detail. We derived Be abundances from high-resolution, high signal-to-noise
UVES/VLT spectra using spectrum synthesis and model atmospheres. Atmospheric
parameters and other elemental abundances are adopted from a previous work. The
sample stars have masses in the range between 0.80 < M/Msun < 1.20. They have
been shown to differ in lithium abundance by about 0.60 dex, with lower A(Li)
in cooler and lower mass stars. Here, we find that all the stars have the same
Be abundance within the uncertainties. These observations show that the Be
abundance is not affected by the mixing events in the pre-main sequence, in
this mass range, in agreement with the expectation of evolutionary models. A
comparison with Be abundances in older clusters shows that, contrary to the
models, cool stars deplete Be during their main-sequence lifetime, confirming
what has been previously suggested in the literature.Comment: To appear in A&A, 12 pages, 12 figure
Are beryllium abundances anomalous in stars with giant planets?
In this paper we present beryllium (Be) abundances in a large sample of 41
extra-solar planet host stars, and for 29 stars without any known
planetary-mass companion, spanning a large range of effective temperatures. The
Be abundances were derived through spectral synthesis done in standard Local
Thermodynamic Equilibrium, using spectra obtained with various instruments. The
results seem to confirm that overall, planet-host stars have ``normal'' Be
abundances, although a small, but not significant, difference might be present.
This result is discussed, and we show that this difference is probably not due
to any stellar ``pollution'' events. In other words, our results support the
idea that the high-metal content of planet-host stars has, overall, a
``primordial'' origin. However, we also find a small subset of planet-host
late-F and early-G dwarfs that might have higher than average Be abundances.
The reason for the offset is not clear, and might be related either to the
engulfment of planetary material, to galactic chemical evolution effects, or to
stellar-mass differences for stars of similar temperature.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Impact of the physical processes in the modeling of HD49933
Context : On its asteroseismic side, the initial run of CoRoT was partly
devoted to the solar like star HD49933.The eigenmodes of this F dwarf have been
observed with unprecedented accuracy.
Aims : We investigate quantitatively the impact of changes in the modeling
parameters like mass and composition. More importantly we investigate how a
sophisticated physics affects the seismological picture of HD49933. We consider
the effects of diffusion, rotation and the changes in convection efficiency.
Methods : We use the CESAM stellar evolution code coupled to the ADIPLS
adiabatic pulsation package to build secular models and their associated
oscillation frequencies. We also exploited the hydrodynamical code STAGGER to
perform surface convection calculations. The seismic variables used in this
work are : the large frequency separation, the derivative of the surface phase
shift,and the eigenfrequencies and .
Results : Mass and uncertainties on the composition have much larger impacts
on the seismic variables we consider than the rotation. The derivative of the
surface phase shift is a promising variable for the determination of the helium
content. The seismological variables of HD49933 are sensitive to the assumed
solar composition and also to the presence of diffusion in the models.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, 7 table
Evolution of lithium beyond the solar age: a Li survey of the old open cluster NGC 188
We have determined Li abundances for 11 G-type stars in the 6-8 Gyr old open
cluster NGC 188. These data significantly enlarge the number of cluster stars
with Li measurements, allowing us to extend the investigation of Li depletion
in open clusters to ages well beyond the age of the Sun. We have also inferred
the cluster metallicity which turns out to be solar. We find that solar-type
stars in NGC 188 are only slightly more Li depleted than the much younger
Hyades and no more Li depleted than stars of similar temperature in the 2-4 Gyr
younger cluster M 67. At variance with M 67, NGC 188 members show virtually no
scatter in their Li abundances. Surprisingly, no solar- type star in NGC 188
appears as Li depleted as the Sun or as the most Li depleted stars in M 67. We
discuss the implications of these results for mechanisms of internal mixing and
Li depletion in main sequence stars.Comment: to appear in A&
A low upper-limit on the lithium isotope ratio in HD140283
We have obtained a high-S/N (900-1100), high-resolving-power (R=95000)
spectrum of the metal-poor subgiant HD 140283 in an effort to measure its
6Li/7Li isotope ratio. From a 1-D atmospheric analysis, we find a value
consistent with zero, 6Li/7Li = 0.001, with an upper limit of 6Li/7Li < 0.026.
This measurement supersedes an earlier detection (0.040 +/- 0.015(1sigma)) by
one of the authors. HD 140283 provides no support for the suggestion that
Population II stars may preserve their 6Li on the portion of the subgiant
branch where 7Li is preserved. However, this star does not defeat the
suggestion either; being at the cool end of subgiant branch of the Spite
plateau, it may be sufficiently cool that 6Li depletion has already set in, or
the star may be sufficiently metal poor that little Galactic production of 6Li
had occurred. Continued investigation of other subgiants is necessary to test
the idea. We also consider the implications of the HD 140283 upper limit in
conjunction with other measurements for models of 6Li production by cosmic rays
from supernovae and structure formation shocks.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures; accepted for publication in Astronomy and
Astrophysic
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