Chemical analysis of giant stars in the young open cluster NGC 3114
O. J. Katime Santrich (1), C. B. Pereira (2), N. A. Drake (1,2) ((1), Observat\'orio Nacional, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil, (2) Sobolev Astronomical, Institute, St. Petersburg State University, St. Petersburg, Russia)

TL;DR
This study provides a detailed chemical composition analysis of seven red giants in the young open cluster NGC 3114, revealing its metallicity, elemental abundances, and stellar properties, and comparing them with field giants and models.
Contribution
It offers the first detailed chemical abundance analysis of NGC 3114's red giants, including multiple elements and isotopic ratios, using high-resolution spectroscopy.
Findings
NGC 3114 has near-solar metallicity ([Fe/H] ≈ -0.01)
Detected sodium enrichment in cluster giants
Oxygen abundance is lower compared to field giants
Abstract
Context: Open clusters are very useful targets for examining possible trends in galactocentric distance and age, especially when young and old open clusters are compared. Aims: We carried out a detailed spectroscopic analysis to derive the chemical composition of seven red giants in the young open cluster NGC 3114. Abundances of C, N, O, Li, Na, Mg, Al, Ca, Si, Ti, Ni, Cr, Y, Zr, La, Ce, and Nd were obtained, as well as the carbon isotopic ratio. Methods: The atmospheric parameters of the studied stars and their chemical abundances were determined using high-resolution optical spectroscopy. We employed the local-thermodynamic-equilibrium model atmospheres of Kurucz and the spectral analysis code MOOG. The abundances of the light elements were derived using the spectral synthesis technique. Results: We found that NGC 3114 has a mean metallicity of [Fe/H] = -0.01+/-0.03. The isochrone fit…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
