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A&A 445, 1099-1126 (2006)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20053832
Quantitative spectroscopy of BA-type supergiants
N. Przybilla1, K. Butler2, S. R. Becker2 and R. P. Kudritzki31 Dr. Remeis-Sternwarte Bamberg, Sternwartstr. 7, 96049 Bamberg, Germany
e-mail: przybilla@sternwarte.uni-erlangen.de
2 Universitäts-Sternwarte München, Scheinerstraße 1, 81679 München, Germany
3 Institute for Astronomy, University of Hawaii, 2680 Woodlawn Drive, Honolulu, HI 96822, USA
(Received 15 July 2005 / Accepted 12 September 2005)
Abstract
Luminous BA-type supergiants have enormous potential for modern
astrophysics. They allow topics ranging from non-LTE physics
and the evolution of massive stars to the chemical evolution of galaxies and
cosmology to be addressed.
A hybrid non-LTE technique for the quantitative spectroscopy
of these stars is discussed. Thorough tests and first
applications of the spectrum synthesis method are presented for the bright Galactic
objects
Leo (A0 Ib), HD 111613 (A2 Iabe), HD 92207 (A0 Iae) and
Ori (B8 Iae), based on high-resolution and high-S/N Echelle spectra.
Stellar parameters are derived from spectroscopic indicators, consistently from multiple
non-LTE ionization equilibria and Stark-broadened hydrogen line profiles,
and they are verified by spectrophotometry. The internal accuracy of the method allows
the 1
-uncertainties to be reduced to
1-2% in
and
to 0.05-0.10 dex in
. Elemental abundances are determined for over 20 chemical species, with many of the astrophysically most
interesting in non-LTE (H, He, C, N, O, Mg, S, Ti, Fe). The non-LTE computations
reduce random errors and remove systematic trends in the analysis.
Inappropriate LTE analyses tend to systematically underestimate iron group abundances and
overestimate the light and
-process element abundances by up to
factors of two to three on the mean. This is because of the different
responses of these
species to radiative and collisional processes in the microscopic picture, which
is explained by fundamental differences of their detailed atomic
structure, and not taken into account in LTE.
Contrary to common assumptions, significant non-LTE abundance corrections of ~0.3 dex can be found even for the weakest lines
(
mÅ). Non-LTE abundance uncertainties
amount to typically 0.05-0.10 dex (random) and ~0.10 dex
(systematic 1
-errors). Near-solar abundances are derived for the
heavier elements in the sample stars, and patterns indicative of mixing with nuclear-processed
matter for the light elements. These imply a blue-loop scenario for
Leo because of first dredge-up abundance ratios, while the other three objects
appear to have evolved directly from the main sequence. In the most
ambitious computations several ten-thousand spectral lines
are accounted for in the spectrum synthesis, permitting the accurate
reproduction of the entire observed spectra from the visual to near-IR.
This prerequisite for the quantitative interpretation of
intermediate-resolution spectra opens up BA-type supergiants as
versatile tools for extragalactic stellar astronomy beyond the Local Group.
The technique presented here is also well suited to improve quantitative analyses of less
extreme stars of similar spectral types.
Key words: stars: supergiants -- stars: early-type -- stars: atmospheres -- stars: fundamental parameters -- stars: abundances -- stars: evolution
SIMBAD Objects
© ESO 2006
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