The chemical abundances in the Galactic Centre from the atmospheres of Red Supergiants
Ben Davies (1,2), Livia Origlia (3), Rolf-Peter Kudritzki (4), Don F., Figer (2), R. Michael Rich (5), Francisco Najarro (6) ((1) Leeds; (2) RIT;, (3) Bologna; (4) IfA Hawaii; (5) UCLA; (6) CSIC Madrid)

TL;DR
This study analyzes high-resolution spectra of two Red Supergiants in the Galactic Centre to determine their chemical abundances, revealing insights into the region's star formation history and chemical evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed chemical abundance analysis of RSGs in the Galactic Centre, linking stellar surface compositions to the region's star formation and chemical enrichment processes.
Findings
Surface Fe/H slightly above Solar for both stars
C and O depletion indicates deep mixing and evolutionary effects
Abundance ratios align with the thin Galactic disk
Abstract
The Galactic Centre (GC) has experienced a high degree of recent star-forming activity, as evidenced by the large number of massive stars currently residing there. The relative abundances of chemical elements in the GC may provide insights into the origins of this activity. Here, we present high-resolution -band spectra of two Red Supergiants in the GC (IRS~7 and VR~5-7), and in combination with spectral synthesis we derive abundances for Fe and C, as well as other -elements Ca, Si, Mg Ti and O. We find that the C-depletion in VR~5-7 is consistent with the predictions of evolutionary models of RSGs, while the heavy depletion of C and O in IRS~7's atmosphere is indicative of deep mixing, possibly due to fast initial rotation and/or enhanced mass-loss. Our results indicate that the {\it current} surface Fe/H content of each star is slightly above Solar. However, comparisons to…
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