The first carbon-enhanced metal-poor star found in the Sculptor dwarf spheroidal
Asa Skuladottir, Eline Tolstoy, Stefania Salvadori, Vanessa Hill, Max, Pettini, Matthew D. Shetrone, Else Starkenburg

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and detailed chemical analysis of the first carbon-enhanced metal-poor star in the Sculptor dwarf spheroidal galaxy, providing insights into early stellar populations and galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed abundance analysis of a CEMP star in Sculptor, revealing its classification as a CEMP-no star and exploring its enrichment history compared to the Galactic halo.
Findings
ET0097 is a CEMP-no star with [Fe/H] = -2.03 and [C/Fe] ≈ 0.8 after correction.
The fraction of CEMP-no stars in Sculptor is lower than in the Galactic halo.
ET0097 shows signs of weak r-process enrichment in lighter neutron-capture elements.
Abstract
The origin of carbon-enhanced metal-poor (CEMP) stars and their possible connection with the chemical elements produced by the first stellar generation is still highly debated. In contrast to the Galactic halo, not many CEMP stars have been found in the dwarf spheroidal galaxies around the Milky Way. Here we present detailed abundances from ESO VLT/UVES high-resolution spectroscopy for ET0097, the first CEMP star found in the Sculptor dwarf spheroidal. This star has , and . The traditional definition of CEMP stars is , but taking into account that this luminous red giant branch star has undergone mixing, it was intrinsically less nitrogen enhanced and more carbon-rich when it was formed, and so it falls under the definition of CEMP stars, as proposed by Aoki et al. (2007) to account…
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