LTE or non-LTE, that is the question
Camilla J. Hansen, Maria Bergemann, Gabriele Cescutti, Patrick, Francois, Almudena Arcones, Amanda I. Karakas, Karin Lind, and Cristina, Chiappini

TL;DR
This study evaluates the impact of LTE and non-LTE assumptions on strontium abundance measurements in metal-poor stars, highlighting the importance of NLTE corrections for accurate chemical tracing and galactic evolution insights.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive NLTE analysis of SrI and SrII lines across a wide range of stellar parameters, improving abundance accuracy and understanding of star-to-star scatter.
Findings
NLTE corrections are crucial at low metallicities.
SrII lines are reliable tracers under LTE and NLTE.
Star-to-star scatter cannot be explained by current GCE models.
Abstract
Strontium has proven itself to be one of the most important neutron-capture elements in the study of metal-poor stars. Thanks to the strong absorption lines of Sr, they can be detected even in the most metal-poor stars and also in low-resolution spectra. However, we still cannot explain the large star-to-star abundance scatter we derive for metal-poor stars. Here we contrast Galactic chemical evolution (GCE) with improved abundances for SrI+II including updated atomic data, to evaluate possible explanations for the large star-to-star scatter at low metallicities. We derive abundances under both local thermodynamic equilibrium (LTE) and non-LTE (NLTE) for stars spanning a large interval of stellar parameters. Gravities and metallicities are also determined in NLTE. We confirm that the ionisation equilibrium between SrI and SrII is satisfied under NLTE but not LTE, where the difference…
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