Nitrogen Enrichment in Atmospheres of A- and F- Type Supergiants
Leonid S. Lyubimkov, David L. Lambert, Sergey A. Korotin, Dmitry B., Poklad, Tamara M. Rachkovskaya, Sergey I. Rostopchin

TL;DR
This study analyzes nitrogen abundances in 30 Galactic A and F supergiants using non-LTE methods, confirming nitrogen overabundance linked to stellar evolution and rotational mixing, with results aligning with theoretical predictions.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed non-LTE nitrogen abundance analysis for a sample of A and F supergiants, linking nitrogen enrichment to stellar rotational history and evolutionary phase.
Findings
Most stars show nitrogen excess [N/Fe] between 0.2 and 0.9 dex.
Non-LTE corrections increase with effective temperature.
Results support rotational mixing and dredge-up as causes of nitrogen enrichment.
Abstract
Using new accurate fundamental parameters of 30 Galactic A and F supergiants, namely their effective temperatures Teff and surface gravities log g, we implemented a non-LTE analysis of the nitrogen abundance in their atmospheres. It is shown that the non-LTE corrections to the N abundances increase with Teff. The nitrogen overabundance as a general feature of this type of stars is confirmed. A majority of the stars has a nitrogen excess [N/Fe] between 0.2 and 0.9 dex with the maximum position of the star's distribution on [N/Fe] between 0.4 and 0.7 dex. The N excesses are discussed in light of predictions for B-type main sequence (MS) stars with rotationally induced mixing and for their next evolutionary phase, i.e. A- and F-type supergiants that have experienced the first dredge-up. Rotationally induced mixing in the MS progenitors of the supergiants may be a significant cause of the…
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