The Carina Project. VIII. The {\alpha}-element abundances
M. Fabrizio, M. Nonino, G. Bono, F. Primas, F. Th\'evenin, P. B., Stetson, S. Cassisi, R. Buonanno, G. Coppola, R. O. da Silva, M. Dall'Ora, I., Ferraro, K. Genovali, R. Gilmozzi, G. Iannicola, M. Marconi, M. Monelli, M., Romaniello, A. R. Walker

TL;DR
This study provides a detailed analysis of alpha-element abundances in Carina's red giant stars, revealing distinct stellar populations with different metallicities and a unique chemical enrichment history compared to other dwarf galaxies and globular clusters.
Contribution
It introduces a new high-precision abundance analysis method using stacked spectra and photometric indices to distinguish stellar populations in Carina, enhancing understanding of its chemical evolution.
Findings
Two stellar populations with different [Fe/H] and [Mg/H] distributions identified.
Carina's alpha-element abundances are similar to field halo and cluster stars.
Evidence of Na-O correlation indicating a unique chemical enrichment history.
Abstract
We have performed a new abundance analysis of Carina Red Giant (RG) stars from spectroscopic data collected with UVES (high resolution) and FLAMES/GIRAFFE (high and medium resolution) at ESO/VLT. The former sample includes 44 RGs, while the latter consists of 65 (high) and ~800 (medium resolution) RGs, covering a significant fraction of the galaxy's RG branch (RGB), and red clump stars. To improve the abundance analysis at the faint magnitude limit, the FLAMES/GIRAFFE data were divided into ten surface gravity and effective temperature bins. The spectra of the stars belonging to the same gravity/temperature bin were stacked. This approach allowed us to increase by at least a factor of five the signal-to-noise ratio in the faint limit (V>20.5mag). We took advantage of the new photometry index cU,B,I introduced by Monelli et al. (2014), as an age and probably a metallicity indicator, to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
