Is the Sun Lighter than the Earth? Isotopic CO in the Photosphere, Viewed through the Lens of 3D Spectrum Synthesis
Thomas R. Ayres, J. R. Lyons, H.-G. Ludwig, E. Caffau, S., Wedemeyer-B\"ohm

TL;DR
This study uses advanced 3D models to refine the isotopic ratios of carbon and oxygen in the solar photosphere, challenging previous 1D analyses and suggesting the Sun is lighter than Earth isotopically.
Contribution
It provides new 3D-based isotopic ratios for the Sun, correcting biases from earlier 1D models and offering insights into solar composition and early solar system processes.
Findings
New isotopic ratios for 13C and 18O in the Sun.
The Sun is likely lighter than Earth isotopically.
Results support recent theories on meteorite isotope compositions.
Abstract
We consider the formation of solar infrared (2-6 micron) rovibrational bands of carbon monoxide (CO) in CO5BOLD 3D convection models, with the aim to refine abundances of the heavy isotopes of carbon (13C) and oxygen (18O,17O), to compare with direct capture measurements of solar wind light ions by the Genesis Discovery Mission. We find that previous, mainly 1D, analyses were systematically biased toward lower isotopic ratios (e.g., R23= 12C/13C), suggesting an isotopically "heavy" Sun contrary to accepted fractionation processes thought to have operated in the primitive solar nebula. The new 3D ratios for 13C and 18O are: R23= 91.4 +/- 1.3 (Rsun= 89.2); and R68= 511 +/- 10 (Rsun= 499), where the uncertainties are 1 sigma and "optimistic." We also obtained R67= 2738 +/- 118 (Rsun= 2632), but we caution that the observed 12C17O features are extremely weak. The new solar ratios for the…
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