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Chromospheric Models and the Oxygen Abundance in Giant Stars

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arxiv 1603.07381 v1 pith:2GQQ2RNX submitted 2016-03-23 astro-ph.SR

Chromospheric Models and the Oxygen Abundance in Giant Stars

classification astro-ph.SR
keywords modelsoxygenabundancelinesstarsgiantchemicalchromospheric
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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Realistic stellar atmospheric models of two typical metal-poor giant stars in Omega Centauri that include a chromosphere influence the formation of optical lines of Oxygen I: the forbidden lines (630nm, 636nm) and the infrared triplet (777.1-777.5 nm). One-dimensional semi-empirical non-LTE models are constructed based on observed Balmer lines. A full non-LTE formulation is applied in evaluating line strengths of O I including photoionization by the Lyman continuum and photoexcitation by Ly-alpha and Ly-beta. Chromospheric models (CHR) yield forbidden oxygen transitions that are stronger than in radiative/convective equilibrium (RCE) models. The triplet oxygen lines from high levels also appear stronger than produced in an RCE model. The inferred oxygen abundance from realistic CHR models for these two stars is decreased by factors ~3 as compared to values derived from RCE models. A lower oxygen abundance suggests that intermediate mass AGB stars contribute to the observed abundance pattern in globular clusters. A change in the oxygen abundance of metal-poor field giants could affect models of deep mixing episodes on the red giant branch. Changes in the oxygen abundance can impact other abundance determinations critical to astrophysics including chemical tagging techniques and galactic chemical evolution.

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