Elemental abundance differences in the 16 Cygni binary system: a signature of gas giant planet formation?
I. Ramirez, J. Melendez, D. Cornejo, I. U. Roederer, J. R. Fish

TL;DR
This study measures elemental abundances in the 16 Cygni binary stars, revealing subtle differences potentially linked to gas giant planet formation, and discusses implications for stellar evolution models.
Contribution
It provides high-precision abundance measurements of both stars, analyzing the impact of planet formation on stellar surface compositions with implications for stellar evolution.
Findings
16CygA is more metal-rich than 16CygB by 0.041 dex.
No correlation between abundance differences and dust condensation temperature.
Gas giant formation may cause a uniform decrease in stellar metallicity.
Abstract
The atmospheric parameters of the components of the 16Cygni binary system, in which the secondary has a gas giant planet detected, are measured accurately using high quality observational data. Abundances relative to solar are obtained for 25 elements with a mean error of 0.023 dex. The fact that 16CygA has about four times more lithium than 16CygB is normal considering the slightly different masses of the stars. The abundance patterns of 16CygA and B, relative to iron, are typical of that observed in most of the so-called solar twin stars, with the exception of the heavy elements (Z>30), which can, however, be explained by Galactic chemical evolution. Differential (A-B) abundances are measured with even higher precision (0.018 dex, on average). We find that 16CygA is more metal-rich than 16CygB by 0.041+/-0.007 dex. On an element-to-element basis, no correlation between the A-B…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
