3,361 research outputs found
Line formation in solar granulation: III. The photospheric Si and meteoritic Fe abundances
Using realistic hydrodynamical simulations of the solar surface convection as
3D, time-dependent, inhomogeneous model atmospheres, the solar photospheric Si
abundance has been determined to be log Si = 7.51 +- 0.04. This constitutes a
difference of 0.04 dex compared with previous estimates based on the 1D
Holweger-M\"uller (1974) model, of which half is attributable to the adopted
model atmosphere and the remaining part to the improved quantum mechanical
broadening treatment. As a consequence, all meteoritic abundances should be
adjusted downwards by the same amount. In particular the meteoritic Fe
abundance will be log Fe = 7.46 +- 0.01, in good agreement with the recently
determined photospheric Fe abundance (Asplund et al. 2000b). The existing
uncertainties unfortunately prevent an observational confirmation of the
postulated effects of elemental migration of metals in the Sun.Comment: Accepted for A&
Line formation in solar granulation: V. Missing UV-opacity and the photospheric Be abundance
The possibility of unaccounted for opacity sources in the UV for late-type
stars has often been invoked to explain discrepancies between predicted and
observed flux distributions and spectral line strengths. Such missing
UV-opacity could among other things have a significant impact on abundance
determination for elements whose only relevant spectral features are accessible
in this wavelength region, such as Be. Here, the study by Balachandran & Bell
(1998) is re-visited in the light of a realistic 3D hydrodynamical solar model
atmosphere and the recently significantly downward revised solar O abundance
obtained with the same model atmosphere. The amount of missing UV-opacity, if
any, is quantified by enforcing that the OH A-X electronic lines around 313 nm
produce the same O abundance as the other available diagnostics: OH
vibration-rotation and pure rotation lines in the IR, the forbidden [OI] 630.0
and 636.3 nm lines and high-excitation, permitted OI lines. This additional
opacity is then applied for the synthesis of the BeII line at 313.0nm to derive
a solar photospheric Be abundance in excellent agreement with the meteoritic
value, thus re-enforcing the conclusions of Balachandran & Bell. The about 50%
extra opacity over accounted for opacity sources can be well explained by
recent calculations by the Iron Project for photo-ionization of FeI.Comment: Accepted for A&A, 7 pages. The article is also available from
http://www.mso.anu.edu.au/~martin/publications.htm
Chemical signatures of planets: beyond solar-twins
Elemental abundance studies of solar twin stars suggest that the solar
chemical composition contains signatures of the formation of terrestrial
planets in the solar system, namely small but significant depletions of the
refractory elements. To test this hypothesis, we study stars which, compared to
solar twins, have less massive convective envelopes (therefore increasing the
amplitude of the predicted effect) or are, arguably, more likely to host
planets (thus increasing the frequency of signature detections). We measure
relative atmospheric parameters and elemental abundances of a late-F type dwarf
sample (52 stars) and a sample of metal-rich solar analogs (59 stars). We
detect refractory-element depletions with amplitudes up to about 0.15 dex. The
distribution of depletion amplitudes for stars known to host gas giant planets
is not different from that of the rest of stars. The maximum amplitude of
depletion increases with effective temperature from 5650 K to 5950 K, while it
appears to be constant for warmer stars (up to 6300 K). The depletions observed
in solar twin stars have a maximum amplitude that is very similar to that seen
here for both of our samples. Gas giant planet formation alone cannot explain
the observed distributions of refractory-element depletions, leaving the
formation of rocky material as a more likely explanation of our observations.
More rocky material is necessary to explain the data of solar twins than
metal-rich stars, and less for warm stars. However, the sizes of the stars'
convective envelopes at the time of planet formation could be regulating these
amplitudes. Our results could be explained if disk lifetimes were shorter in
more massive stars, as independent observations indeed seem to suggest.Comment: Astronomy and Astrophysics, in press. Full tables available in the
source downloa
Line formation in convective stellar atmospheres. I. Granulation corrections for solar photospheric abundances
In an effort to estimate the largely unknown effects of photospheric
temperature fluctuations on spectroscopic abundance determinations, we have
studied the problem of LTE line formation in the inhomogeneous solar
photosphere based on detailed 2-dimensional radiation hydrodynamics simulations
of the convective surface layers of the Sun. By means of a strictly
differential 1D/2D comparison of the emergent equivalent widths, we have
derived "granulation abundance corrections" for individual lines, which have to
be applied to standard abundance determinations based on homogeneous 1D model
atmospheres in order to correct for the influence of the photospheric
temperature fluctuations. In general, we find a line strengthening in the
presence of temperature inhomogeneities as a consequence of the non-linear
temperature dependence of the line opacity. For many lines of practical
relevance, the magnitude of the abundance correction may be estimated from
interpolation in the tables and graphs provided with this paper. The
application of abundance corrections may often be an acceptable alternative to
a detailed fitting of individual line profiles based on hydrodynamical
simulations. The present study should be helpful in providing upper bounds for
possible errors of spectroscopic abundance analyses, and for identifying
spectral lines which are least sensitive to the influence of photospheric
temperature inhomogeneities.Comment: Accepted by A&
Freshly ionized matter around the final Helium shell flash object V4334 Sgr (Sakurai's object)
We report on the discovery of recently ionized hydrogen-deficient gas in the
immediate circumstellar environment of the final helium shell flash star V4334
Sgr (Sakurai's object). On spectra obtained with FORS2 multi-object
spectroscopy we have found spatially extended (about 2") emission from [N II],
[O I], [O II] and very faint Halpha and [S II]. In the [N II] (ll6548,83) lines
we have identified two components located at velocities -350 +/-50 and +200
+/-50 km/s, relative to V4334 Sgr itself. The full width of the [N II] l6583
feature at zero intensity corresponds to a velocity spread of about 1500 km/s.
Based on the available data it is not possible to conclusively determine the
mechanism of ionization. Both photo-ionization, from a rapidly evolving central
star, and shock excitation, as the result of the collision of the fast ouflows
with slower circumstellar matter, could account for the observed lines. The
central star is still hidden behind strong dust absorption, since only a faint
highly reddened continuum is apparent in the spectra. Theory states that it
will become hotter and will retrace its post-asymptotic giant branch evolution
towards the planetary nebula domain. Our detection of the ionized ejecta from
the very late helium shell flash marks the beginning of a new phase in this
star's amazingly rapid evolution.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures. Accepted by ApJ
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