-
Articles citing this article
-
Same authors
- Recommend this article
- Download citation
- Alert me if this article is cited
- Alert me if this article is corrected
|
||||||||||||||||||
A&A 447, 299-310 (2006)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20053182
Li and Be depletion in metal-poor subgiants
A. E. García Pérez1 and F. Primas21 Department of Astronomy and Space Physics, Uppsala University, Box 515, 751 20 Uppsala, Sweden
e-mail: aegp@astro.uu.se; A.E.Garcia-Perez@open.ac.uk
2 European Southern Observatory, Karl-Schwarzschild Strasse 2, 85748 Garching bei München, Germany
e-mail: fprimas@eso.org
(Received 3 April 2005 / Accepted 7 October 2005)
Abstract
A sample of metal-poor subgiants has been
observed with the UVES spectrograph at the Very Large Telescope
and abundances of Li and Be have been determined. Typical
signal-to-noise per spectral bin values for the co-added spectra are
of the order of 500 for the
line (670.78 nm) and
100 for the
doublet lines (313.04 nm). The spectral
analysis of the observations was carried out using the Uppsala suite of
codes and MARCS (1D-LTE) model atmospheres with stellar parameters
from photometry, parallaxes, isochrones and Fe II lines. Abundance
estimates of the light elements were corrected for departures from
local thermodynamic equilibrium in the line formation. Effective
temperatures and Li abundances seem to be correlated and Be
abundances correlate with [O/H]. Standard models predict Li and Be
abundances approximately one order of magnitude lower than
main-sequence values which is in general agreement with the
observations. On average, our observed depletions seem to be 0.1 dex
smaller and between 0.2 and 0.4 dex larger (depending on which
reference is taken) than those predicted for Li and Be, respectively.
This is not surprising since the initial Li abundance, as derived from
main-sequence stars on the Spite plateau, may be systematically in
error by 0.1 dex or more, and uncertainties in the spectrum
normalisation and continuum drawing may affect our Be abundances
systematically.
Key words: stars: abundances -- stars: atmospheres -- stars: late type -- stars: Population II
SIMBAD Objects
© ESO 2006
| What is OpenURL? |
- If your librarian has set up your subscription with an OpenURL resolver, OpenURL links appear automatically on the abstract pages.
- You can define your own OpenURL resolver with your EDPS Account. In this case your choice will be given priority over that of your library.
- You can use an add-on for your browser (Firefox or I.E.) to display OpenURL links on a page (see http://www.openly.com/openurlref/). You should disable this module if you wish to use the OpenURL server that you or your library have defined.

BibSonomy
CiteUlike
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Facebook