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The nature of the Li enrichment in the most Li-rich giant star

Authors :
Yan, Hong-Liang
Shi, Jian-Rong
Zhou, Yu-Tao
Chen, Yong-Shou
Li, Er-Tao
Zhang, Suyalatu
Bi, Shao-Lan
Wu, Ya-Qian
Li, Zhi-Hong
Guo, Bing
Liu, Wei-Ping
Gao, Qi
Zhang, Jun-Bo
Zhou, Ze-Ming
Li, Hai-Ning
Zhao, Gang
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

About one percent of giants\upcite{Brown1989} are detected to have anomalously high lithium (Li) abundances in their atmospheres, conflicting directly with the prediction of the standard stellar evolution models\upcite{Iben1967}, and making the production and evolution of Li more intriguing, not only in the sense of the Big Bang nucleosynthesis\upcite{Cyburt2016,Spite1982} or the Galactic medium\upcite{Tajitsu2015}, but also the evolution of stars. Decades of efforts have been put into explaining why such outliers exist\upcite{Sackmann1999, Denissenkov2004, Charbonnel2010}, yet the origins of Li-rich giants are still being debated. Here we report the discovery of the most Li-rich giant known to date, with a super-high Li abundance of 4.51. This rare phenomenon was snapshotted together with another short-term event that the star is experiencing its luminosity bump on the red giant branch. Such high Li abundance indicates that the star might be at the very beginning of its Li-rich phase, which provides a great opportunity to investigate the origin and evolution of Li in the Galaxy. A detailed nuclear simulation is presented with up-to-date reaction rates to recreate the Li enriching process in this star. Our results provide tight constraints on both observational and theoretical points of view, suggesting that low-mass giants can produce Li inside themselves to a super high level via $^{7}$Be transportation during the red giant phase.<br />Comment: 17 pages, 6 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1809.00187
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41550-018-0544-7