Lithium and oxygen in globular cluster dwarfs and the early disc accretion scenario
M.Salaris (1), S. Cassisi (2) ((1) Astrophysics Research Institute,, Liverpool John Moores University, UK (2) INAF- Osservatorio Astronomico, Collurania, Teramo, I)

TL;DR
This study tests the early disc accretion model in globular clusters by analyzing lithium, oxygen, sodium, and helium abundances in stars, finding mixed results and constraints on the properties of polluting stars.
Contribution
It provides a detailed observational test of the early disc accretion scenario using multiple element abundances in globular cluster stars.
Findings
No consistent solution for NGC6752.
Large spectroscopic errors in M4 limit constraints.
Possible solution for 47Tuc with rapid pollution (~1 Myr).
Abstract
A new scenario --early disc accretion-- has been recently proposed to explain the discovery of multiple stellar populations in Galactic globular clusters. According to this model, the existence of well defined (anti)-correlations amongst light element abundances (i.e. C, N, O, Na) in the photospheres of stars belonging to the same cluster (and the associated helium enrichment), is caused by accretion of the ejecta of short lived interacting massive binary systems (and single fast rotating massive stars) on fully convective pre-main sequence low- and very low-mass stars, during the early stages of the cluster evolution. We investigated the constraints provided by considering simultaneously the observed spread of lithium and oxygen (and when possible also sodium) abundances for samples of turn-off stars in NGC6752, NGC6121 (M4), and NGC104 (47Tuc), and the helium abundance of their…
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