Fluorine abundances in dwarf stars of the solar neighbourhood
A. Recio-Blanco, P. de Laverny, C. Worley, N. C. Santos, C. Melo, G., Israelian

TL;DR
This study measures fluorine abundances in nine nearby dwarf stars, suggesting asymptotic giant branch stars as the main fluorine source, and finds no strong link to supernovae or iron content.
Contribution
First fluorine abundance measurements in nearby dwarf stars using HF lines, highlighting AGB stars as primary fluorine producers in the solar neighborhood.
Findings
Some stars show fluorine enhancement compared to the Sun.
No correlation between fluorine abundance and iron content.
Weak or no correlation between fluorine and alpha-elements.
Abstract
In spite of many observational efforts aiming to characterize the chemical evolution of our Galaxy, not much is known about the origin of fluorine (F). Models suggest that the F found in the Galaxy might have been produced mainly in three different ways, namely, Type II supernovae, asymptotic giant branch nucleosynthesis, or in the core of Wolf-Rayet stars. Only a few observational measurements of F abundances are available in the literature and mostly for objects whose characteristics might hamper an accurate determination of fluorine abundance (e.g.,complex mixing and nucleosynthesis processes, external/internal contamination). We derive the F abundances for a set of nine cool main-sequence dwarfs in the solar neighbourhood, based on an unblended line of the HF molecule at 2.3 microns. In addition, we study the s-process elements of five of these stars. We acquire data using the…
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