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Spectroscopic studies of very metal-poor stars with the Subaru High Dispersion Spectrograph. III. Light neutron-capture elements

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Aoki, Wako
Honda, Satoshi
Beers, Timothy C
Kajino, Toshitaka
Ando, Hiroyasu
Norris, John
Ryan, Sean G
Izumiura, Hideyuki
Sadakane, Kozo
Takada-Hidai, Masahide

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IOP Publishing

Abstract

Elemental abundance measurements have been obtained for a sample of 18 very metal-poor stars using spectra obtained with the Subaru Telescope High Dispersion Spectrograph. Seventeen stars, among which 16 are newly analyzed in the present work, were selected from candidate metal-poor stars identified in the HK survey of Beers and colleagues. The metallicity range covered by our sample is -3.1 ≲ [Fe/H] ≲ -2.4. The abundances of carbon, α-elements, and iron-peak elements determined for these stars confirm the trends found by previous work. One exception is the large overabundance of Mg, Al, and Sc found in BS 16934-002, a giant with [Fe/H] = -2.8. Interestingly, this is the most metal-rich star (by about 1 dex in [Fe/H]) known with such large overabundances in these elements. Furthermore, BS 16934-002 does not share the large overabundances of carbon that are associated with the two other, otherwise similar, extremely metal-poor stars CS 22949-037 and CS 29498-043. By combining our new results with those of previous studies, we investigate the distribution of neutron-capture elements in very metal-poor stars, focusing on the production of the light neutron-capture elements (e.g., Sr, Y, and Zr). Large scatter is found in the abundance ratios between the light and heavy neutron-capture elements (e.g., Sr/Ba, Y/Eu) for stars with low abundances of heavy neutron-capture elements. Most of these stars have extremely low metallicity ([Fe/H] ≲ -3). By contrast, the observed scatter in these ratios is much smaller in stars with excesses of heavy neutron-capture elements and with higher metallicity. These results can be naturally explained by assuming that two processes independently enriched the neutron-capture elements in the early Galaxy. One process increases both light and heavy neutron-capture elements and affects stars with [Fe/H] ≳ -3, while the other process contributes only to the light neutron-capture elements and affects most stars with [Fe/H] ≳ -3.5. Interestingly, the Y/Zr ratio is similar in stars with high and low abundances of heavy neutron-capture elements. These results provide constraints on modeling of neutron-capture processes, in particular, those responsible for the nucleosynthesis of light neutron-capture elements at very low metallicity.

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Astrophysical Journal, The

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2037-12-31
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