HVS7: a chemically peculiar hyper-velocity star
N. Przybilla (1), M. F. Nieva (1,2), A. Tillich (1), U. Heber (1), K., Butler (3), W. R. Brown (4) ((1) Dr. Remeis-Observatory Bamberg, (2) MPI for, Astrophysics Garching, (3) University Observatory Munich, (4) Smithsonian, Astrophysical Observatory)

TL;DR
HVS7 is a chemically peculiar hyper-velocity star with unique elemental overabundances and underabundances, likely caused by atomic diffusion, making its origin from the Galactic center uncertain without high-precision astrometry.
Contribution
This study provides a detailed chemical and stellar parameter analysis of HVS7, revealing its peculiar abundance pattern and challenging assumptions about its origin and evolutionary status.
Findings
HVS7 shows extreme chemical peculiarities with heavy element overabundances.
NLTE effects significantly influence abundance measurements of TiII and FeII.
HVS7's abundance pattern resembles magnetic B stars, suggesting atomic diffusion effects.
Abstract
Context: Hyper-velocity stars are suggested to originate from the dynamical interaction of binary stars with the supermassive black hole in the Galactic centre (GC), which accelerates one component of the binary to beyond the Galactic escape velocity. Aims: The evolutionary status and GC origin of the HVS SDSS J113312.12+010824.9 (HVS7) is constrained from a detailed study of its stellar parameters and chemical composition. Methods: High-resolution spectra of HVS7 obtained with UVES on the ESO VLT were analysed using state-of-the-art NLTE/LTE modelling techniques that can account for a chemically-peculiar composition via opacity sampling. Results: Instead of the expected slight enrichments of alpha-elements and near-solar Fe, huge chemical peculiarities of all elements are apparent. The He abundance is very low (<1/100 solar), C, N and O are below the detection limit, i.e they are…
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