A holistic approach to carbon-enhanced metal-poor stars
T. Masseron (1,2), J. A. Johnson (1), B. Plez (2,3), S. Van Eck (4),, F. Primas (5), S. Goriely (4), A. Jorissen (4) ((1) The Ohio State, University, USA, (2) GRAAL, Universit\'e Montpellier II, France (3), Department of Physics, Astronomy, Uppsala Astronomical Observatory

TL;DR
This paper classifies and analyzes various subclasses of carbon-enhanced metal-poor stars to understand their nucleosynthesis origins, revealing new correlations and trends that challenge existing models.
Contribution
It provides a detailed subclassification of CEMP stars, identifies new abundance correlations, and highlights discrepancies with current AGB nucleosynthesis models.
Findings
Identification of CEMP-low-s stars sharing properties with CEMP-s and CEMP-no stars.
Strong Ba-C correlation in CEMP-s stars indicating 13C neutron source operation.
CEMP-no stars show declining C enhancement with decreasing metallicity, not predicted by current models.
Abstract
By considering the various CEMP subclasses separately, we try to derive, from the specific signatures imprinted on the abundances, parameters (such as metallicity, mass, temperature, and neutron source) characterizing AGB nucleosynthesis from the specific signatures imprinted on the abundances, and separate them from the impact of thermohaline mixing, first dredge-up, and dilution associated with the mass transfer from the companion.To put CEMP stars in a broad context, we collect abundances for about 180 stars of various metallicities, luminosity classes, and abundance patterns, from our own sample and from literature. First, we show that there are CEMP stars which share the properties of CEMP-s stars and CEMP-no stars (which we call CEMP-low-s stars). We also show that there is a strong correlation between Ba and C abundances in the s-only CEMP stars. This strongly points at the…
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