New Detections of Arsenic, Selenium, and Other Heavy Elements in Two Metal-Poor Stars
Ian U. Roederer, Hendrik Schatz, James E. Lawler, Timothy C. Beers,, John J. Cowan, Anna Frebel, Inese I. Ivans, Christopher Sneden, Jennifer S., Sobeck

TL;DR
This study uses Hubble spectra to detect and analyze heavy element abundances in two metal-poor stars, revealing consistent enhancement patterns and suggesting different nucleosynthesis mechanisms at play.
Contribution
First detection of several heavy elements in these stars, providing new data on their abundance ratios and nucleosynthesis implications.
Findings
As and Se are enhanced relative to iron, indicating different nucleosynthetic processes.
Abundance ratios of various elements are consistent across multiple stars, showing stable enhancement patterns.
Cu I lines may not be in local thermodynamic equilibrium, affecting abundance measurements.
Abstract
We use the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph on board the Hubble Space Telescope to obtain new high-quality spectra covering the 1900 to 2360 Angstrom wavelength range for two metal-poor stars, HD 108317 and HD 128279. We derive abundances of Cu II, Zn II, As I, Se I, Mo II, and Cd II, which have not been detected previously in either star. Abundances derived for Ge I, Te I, Os II, and Pt I confirm those derived from lines at longer wavelengths. We also derive upper limits from the non-detection of W II, Hg II, Pb II, and Bi I. The mean [As/Fe] ratio derived from these two stars and five others in the literature is unchanged over the metallicity range -2.8 < [Fe/H] < -0.6, <[As/Fe]> = +0.28 +/- 0.14 (std. dev. = 0.36 dex). The mean [Se/Fe] ratio derived from these two stars and six others in the literature is also constant, <[Se/Fe]> = +0.16 +/- 0.09 (std. dev. = 0.26 dex). The As…
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