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The Effect of Non-LTE and Atmospheric Perturbations on Relative Abundance Determinations in Metal-Poor Giants

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 July 2016

Ruth C. Peterson*
Affiliation:
Whipple Observatory, Smithsonian Institution, Steward Observatory, Room 458, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721

Abstract

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This paper reports an abundance analysis of spectra of 10 extremely metal-poor giants, including two in the globular cluster M92, in collaboration with Robert Kurucz and Eugene Avrett of the Center for Astrophysics and Bruce Carney of the University of North Carolina. An intercomparison of equivalent widths indicates that Luck and Bond have seriously overestimated the strengths of very weak lines and so deduced a spuriously high nickel abundance in the most metal-poor stars. A review of line-formation effects in the Sun strongly suggests that the rather high metallicities found for some extremely metal-poor stars by Pilachowski and coworkers is due to errors in their solar gf values, which unfortunately are unpublished. In our own analyses, stars with asymmetric H-alpha line profiles tend to have an excitation temperature at odds with the effective temperature found from infrared photometry. The discrepancy is removed by lowering the surface temperature by 100 K or by increasing the microturbulent velocity, either by a constant 0.5 km/s or by an amount which increases toward the surface. These changes have the most impact on those abundances deduced from strong lines or low-excitation lines of the neutral species; this includes sodium and barium as well as all the Fe I lines with very accurate gf values. Despite these difficulties, our findings reveal a low abundance for M92, and intrinsic scatter in the relationship between the relative abundances of sodium and oxygen and the overall iron abundance. In one field star, oxygen is apparently overabundant by an order of magnitude or more, while in the two M92 giants, the sodium abundance appears to differ by nearly this much.

Type
VI. Chemical Composition of Stars
Copyright
Copyright © Kluwer 1988 

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