Oxygen isotopic ratios in intermediate-mass red giants
Thomas Lebzelter, Oscar Straniero, Kenneth Hinkle, Walter Nowotny and, Bernhard Aringer

TL;DR
This study measures oxygen isotopic ratios in intermediate-mass red giants to compare with stellar and galactic evolution models, revealing discrepancies especially in 16O/18O ratios suggesting initial abundance variations.
Contribution
First measurement of oxygen isotopic ratios in red giants across a range of masses, comparing results with models to understand nucleosynthesis and galactic chemical evolution.
Findings
Observed 16O/17O ratios agree with models.
Observed 16O/18O ratios are lower than predictions.
No evidence of extra-mixing in studied giants.
Abstract
Context. The abundances of the three main isotopes of oxygen are altered in the course of the CNO-cycle. When the first dredge-up mixes the burning products to the surface, the nucleosynthesis processes can be probed by measuring oxygen isotopic ratios. Aims. By measuring 16O/17O and 16O/18O in red giants of known mass we compare the isotope ratios with predictions from stellar and galactic evolution modelling. Methods. Oxygen isotopic ratios were derived from the K-band spectra of six red giants. The sample red giants are open cluster members with known masses of between 1.8 and 4.5 Msun . The abundance determination employs synthetic spectra calculated with the COMARCS code. The effect of uncertainties in the nuclear reaction rates, the mixing length, and of a change in the initial abundance of the oxygen isotopes was determined by a set of nucleosynthesis and mixing models using the…
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