The solar photospheric abundance of carbon.Analysis of atomic carbon lines with the CO5BOLD solar model
E. Caffau (1), H.-G. Ludwig (2,1), P. Bonifacio (2,1,3), R. Faraggiana, (4), M. Steffen (5), B. Freytag (6), I. Kamp (7), T.R. Ayres (8)((1) GEPI,, Observatoire de Paris, (2) CIFIST Marie Curie Excellence Team, (3) INAF - OA, Trieste, (4) Univ. Trieste, (5) AIP

TL;DR
This study uses advanced hydrodynamical simulations with the CO5BOLD code to refine the solar photospheric carbon abundance, resulting in a value slightly higher than previous estimates and better alignment with helioseismology data.
Contribution
The paper presents a new determination of the solar carbon abundance using CO5BOLD hydrodynamical models and detailed LTE departure calculations, improving accuracy over previous methods.
Findings
Solar carbon abundance is A(C)=8.50±0.06.
The derived solar metallicity is Z=0.0154.
Results are more consistent with helioseismology constraints.
Abstract
The use of hydrodynamical simulations, the selection of atomic data, and the computation of deviations from local thermodynamical equilibrium for the analysis of the solar spectra have implied a downward revision of the solar metallicity. We are in the process of using the latest simulations computed with the CO5BOLD code to reassess the solar chemical composition. We determine the solar photospheric carbon abundance by using a radiation-hydrodynamical CO5BOLD model, and compute the departures from local thermodynamical equilibrium by using the Kiel code. We measure equivalent widths of atomic CI lines on high resolution, high signal-to-noise ratio solar atlases. Deviations from local thermodynamic equilibrium are computed in 1D with the Kiel code. Our recommended value for the solar carbon abundance, relies on 98 independent measurements of observed lines and is A(C)=8.50+-0.06, the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSolar and Space Plasma Dynamics · Astro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
