The Galactic Deuterium Abundance and Dust Depletion: Insights From an Expanded Ti/H Sample
Sara L. Ellison, Jason X. Prochaska, Sebastian Lopez

TL;DR
This study investigates the relationship between deuterium abundance and dust depletion in the galaxy, using an expanded titanium/hydrogen sample, revealing complex correlations that challenge simple dust depletion and infall models.
Contribution
It provides the first large-scale analysis of Ti/H and D/H correlation, questioning the dust depletion explanation for D/H variations in the galaxy.
Findings
Confirmed correlation between Ti/H and D/H at 97% confidence.
Found shallower Ti/H gradient compared to Fe and Si, contrary to expectations.
Observed no tight correlation between Ti/H and hydrogen density.
Abstract
The primordial abundance of deuterium (D/H) yields a measure of the density of baryons in the universe and is an important complement to determinations from cosmic microwave background (CMB) experiments. Indeed, the current small sample of high redshift D/H measurements from quasar absorption line studies are in excellent agreement with CMB-derived values. Conversely, absorption line measurements of the Galactic D/H ratio in almost 50 stellar sightlines show a puzzlingly large scatter outside the Local Bubble which is difficult to explain simply by astration from the primordial value. Here, we investigate the dust depletion scenario by studying the correlation between D/H and the abundance of titanium, one of the most refractory elements readily observed in the ISM. With a sample 3 times larger than previous work, we confirm a correlation between Ti/H and D/H at the 97% confidence…
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