VLT/FLAMES spectroscopy of Red Giant Branch stars in the Carina dwarf spheroidal galaxy
B. Lemasle, V. Hill, E. Tolstoy, K. A. Venn, M. D. Shetrone, M. J., Irwin, T. J. L. de Boer, E. Starkenburg, S. Salvadori

TL;DR
This study uses VLT-FLAMES spectroscopy to analyze chemical abundances in Red Giant Branch stars of the Carina dwarf galaxy, revealing distinct star formation episodes and their unique chemical enrichment histories.
Contribution
It provides detailed chemical abundance measurements of RGB stars in Carina, linking star formation episodes to their specific chemical enrichment patterns, a novel approach for this galaxy.
Findings
Carina has two distinct RGB populations: old and intermediate age.
The old population is metal-poor and alpha-rich.
The intermediate population shows a wide range of metallicities and alpha-element abundances.
Abstract
The ages of individual Red Giant Branch stars (RGB) can range from 1 Gyr old to the age of the Universe, and it is believed that the abundances of most chemical elements in their photospheres remain unchanged with time (those that are not affected by the 1st dredge-up). This means that they trace the ISM in the galaxy at the time the star formed, and hence the chemical enrichment history of the galaxy. CMD analysis has shown the Carina dwarf spheroidal (dSph) to have had an unusually episodic star formation history (SFH) which is expected to be reflected in the abundances of different chemical elements. We use the VLT-FLAMES spectrograph in HR mode (R~20000) to measure the abundances of several chemical elements in a sample of 35 RGB stars in Carina. We also combine these abundances with photometry to derive age estimates for these stars. This allows us to determine which of two…
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