The Puzzling Li-rich Red Giant Associated with NGC 6819
Joleen K. Carlberg, Verne V. Smith, Katia Cunha, Steven R. Majewski,, Szabolcs Meszaros, Matthew Shetrone, Carlos Allende Prieto, Dmitry Bizyaev,, Keivan G. Stassun, Scott W. Fleming, Gail Zasowski, Fred Hearty, David L., Nidever, Donald P. Schneider, Jon A. Holtzman

TL;DR
This study investigates a Li-rich red giant in NGC 6819, analyzing its chemical abundances and asteroseismic properties to understand Li enhancement mechanisms and cluster membership status.
Contribution
The paper provides detailed abundance measurements and asteroseismic analysis of the Li-rich star, challenging existing models of Li enhancement in red giants.
Findings
Li-rich star has standard first dredge-up abundance ratios.
Star's surface gravity suggests very low mass if cluster member.
Chemical analysis confirms cluster membership and standard mixing processes.
Abstract
A Li-rich red giant star (2M19411367+4003382) recently discovered in the direction of NGC 6819 belongs to the rare subset of Li-rich stars that have not yet evolved to the luminosity bump, an evolutionary stage where models predict Li can be replenished. The currently favored model to explain Li enhancement in first-ascent red giants like 2M19411367+4003382 requires deep mixing into the stellar interior. Testing this model requires a measurement of 12C/13C, which is possible to obtain from APOGEE spectra. However, the Li-rich star also has abnormal asteroseismic properties that call into question its membership in the cluster, even though its radial velocity and location on color-magnitude diagrams are consistent with membership. To address these puzzles, we have measured a wide array of abundances in the Li-rich star and three comparison stars using spectra taken as part of the APOGEE…
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