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arxiv: 1503.01990 · v3 · pith:ZY2WSUSLnew · submitted 2015-03-06 · 🌌 astro-ph.SR

New Abundances From Very Old Stars

classification 🌌 astro-ph.SR
keywords starsmetal-poorprocessesabundancescarboncempelementsenhanced
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Metal-poor stars provide the fossil record of Galactic chemical evolution and the nucleosynthesis processes that took place at the earliest times in the history of our Galaxy. From detailed abundance studies of low mass, extremely metal-poor stars ([Fe/H] < -3), we can trace and help constrain the formation processes which created the first heavy elements in our Galaxy. Here we present the results of a ~25-star homogeneously analysed sample of metal-poor candidates from the Hamburg/ESO survey. We have derived abundances for a large number of elements ranging from Li to Ba, covering production processes from hydrostatic burning to neutron-capture. The sample includes some of the most metal-poor stars ([Fe/H] < -4) studied to date, and also a number of stars enhanced in carbon. The so called CEMP (carbon enhanced metal-poor) stars, these stars make up ~20% of the stars with [Fe/H] < -3, and 80% of the stars with [Fe/H] < -4.5. The progenitors of CEMP stars are still not fully constrained; they could be a result of binary mass transfer or high-mass explosive events in the early universe.

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Cited by 1 Pith paper

Reviewed papers in the Pith corpus that reference this work. Sorted by Pith novelty score.

  1. NEFERTITI: Linking early galaxy formation to the assembly of the Milky Way

    astro-ph.GA 2026-05 unverdicted novelty 6.0

    NEFERTITI simulations show that the Milky Way's most metal-poor stars largely come from a handful of accreted massive dwarf galaxies, while reproducing the JWST Hebe galaxy at z~11 as a pure Population III system.