An Elemental Assay of Very, Extremely, and Ultra Metal-Poor Stars
T. Hansen, C. J. Hansen, N. Christlieb, T. C. Beers, D. Yong, M. S., Bessell, A. Frebel, A. E. Garcia Perez, V. M. Placco, J. E. Norris, M., Asplund

TL;DR
This study conducts a detailed high-resolution elemental abundance analysis of 23 very metal-poor stars, revealing new insights into their chemical compositions, classifications, and implications for astrophysical nucleosynthesis sites.
Contribution
It significantly expands the sample of known CEMP and NEMP stars and provides detailed abundance patterns across different metallicity regimes.
Findings
Detection of lithium depletion in CEMP-no stars.
Confirmation of two plateaus in carbon abundances of CEMP stars.
Evidence of a Ba abundance floor at A(Ba)~ -2.0 in CEMP-no stars.
Abstract
We present a high-resolution elemental-abundance analysis for a sample of 23 very metal-poor (VMP; [Fe/H] < -2.0) stars, 12 of which are extremely metal-poor (EMP; [Fe/H] < -3.0), and 4 of which are ultra metal-poor (UMP; [Fe/H] < -4.0). These stars were targeted to explore differences in the abundance ratios for elements that constrain the possible astrophysical sites of element production, including Li, C, N, O, the alpha-elements, the iron-peak elements, and a number of neutron-capture elements. This sample substantially increases the number of known carbon-enhanced metal-poor (CEMP) and nitrogen-enhanced metal-poor (NEMP) stars -- our program stars include eight that are considered "normal" metal-poor stars, six CEMP-no stars, five CEMP-s stars, two CEMP-r stars, and two CEMP-r/s stars. One of the CEMP- stars and one of the CEMP-r/s stars are possible NEMP stars. We detect…
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