Fluorine in a Carbon-Enhanced Metal-Poor Star
S.C. Schuler (NOAO/Ctio), K. Cunha (NOAO), V.V. Smith (NOAO), T., Sivarani (MSU), T.C. Beers (MSU), Y.S. Lee (MSU)

TL;DR
This study measures fluorine abundance in a very metal-poor, carbon-enhanced star, revealing a significant fluorine overabundance that provides insights into nucleosynthesis in the early Galaxy.
Contribution
First measurement of fluorine in a CEMP star, linking fluorine overabundance to nucleosynthetic processes and binary mass transfer in early stellar evolution.
Findings
Fluorine abundance is super-solar with [F/Fe] = 2.90.
Star HE 1305+0132 is the most Fe-deficient star with fluorine measured.
Fluorine overabundance supports AGB mass transfer as pollution source.
Abstract
The fluorine abundance of the Carbon-Enhanced Metal-Poor (CEMP) star HE 1305+0132 has been derived by analysis of the molecular HF (1-0) R9 line at 2.3357 microns in a high-resolution (R = 50,000) spectrum obtained with the Phoenix spectrometer and Gemini-South telescope. Our abundance analysis makes use of a CNO-enhanced ATLAS12 model atmosphere characterized by a metallicity and CNO enhancements determined utilizing medium-resolution (R = 3,000) optical and near-IR spectra. The effective iron abundance is found to be [Fe/H] = -2.5, making HE 1305+0132 the most Fe-deficient star, by more than an order of magnitude, for which the abundance of fluorine has been measured. Using spectral synthesis, we derive a super-solar fluorine abundance of A(19F) = 4.96 +/- 0.21, corresponding to a relative abundance of [F/Fe] = 2.90. A single line of the Phillips C_2 system is identified in our…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
