Chemical Evolution of Ytterbium in the Galactic Disk [GA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2202.00691


Measuring the abundances of neutron-capture elements in Galactic disk stars is an important part of understanding key stellar and galactic processes. In the optical wavelength regime a number of different neutron-capture elements have been measured, however from the infrared H-band only the s-process dominated element cerium has been accurately measured for a large sample of disk stars. The more r-process dominated element ytterbium has only been measured in a small subset of stars so far. In this study we aim to measure the ytterbium (Yb) abundance of local disk giants using the Yb II line at $\lambda_\text{air}$=16498\AA. We also compare the resulting abundance trend with Ce and Eu abundances for the same stars to analyse the s- and r-process contributions. We analyse 30 K-giants with high-resolution H-band spectra using spectral synthesis. The very same stars have already been analysed using high-resolution optical spectra using the same method, but the abundance of Yb was not possible to determine from those spectra due to blending issues for stars with [Fe/H]>-1. In this present analysis, we utilise the stellar parameters determined from the optical analysis. We determined the Yb abundances with an estimated uncertainty for [Yb/Fe] of 0.1 dex. From comparison, the trend of [Yb/Fe] follows closely the [Eu/Fe] trend and has clear s-process enrichment in identified s-rich stars. From the comparison, both the validity of the Yb abundances are ensured, and the theoretical prediction of a roughly 40/60 s-/r-process contribution to Yb’s origin is supported. These results show that with a careful and detailed analysis of infrared spectra, reliable Yb abundances can be derived for a wider sample of cooler giants in the range -1.1<[Fe/H]<0.3. This is promising for further studies of the production of Yb and for the r-process channel, key for Galactochemical evolution, in the infrared.

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M. Montelius, R. Forsberg, N. Ryde, et. al.
Thu, 3 Feb 22
5/56

Comments: Accepted for publication in A&A. 11 pages, 7 figures