Models for the lithium abundances of multiple populations in globular clusters and the possible role of the Big Bang lithium
F. D'Antona, A. D'Ercole, R. Carini, E. Vesperini, P. Ventura

TL;DR
This paper investigates how lithium abundances in globular cluster stars can inform models of multiple stellar populations, focusing on the role of AGB star ejecta and primordial lithium levels.
Contribution
It introduces a model linking lithium patterns to AGB star yields and primordial lithium, offering a way to test super-AGB predictions through observed star populations.
Findings
Super-AGB yields can be tested via lithium in blue main sequence stars.
Models show lithium abundance depends on primordial levels and AGB ejecta.
O-Li distribution may reveal primordial lithium abundance.
Abstract
Globular cluster stars show chemical abundance patterns typical of hot-CNO processing. Lithium is easily destroyed by proton capture in stellar environments, so its abundance may be crucial to discriminate among different models proposed to account for multiple populations. In order to reproduce the observed O-Na anticorrelation and other patterns typical of multiple populations, the formation of second generation stars must occur from the nuclearly processed stellar ejecta, responsible of the chemical anomalies, diluted with pristine gas having the composition of first generation stars. The lithium abundance in the unprocessed gas -which is very likely to be equal to the lithium abundance emerging from the Big Bang- affects the lithium chemical patterns among the cluster stars. This paper focuses on a scenario in which processed gas is provided by asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars.…
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