Chemical abundances of giant stars in the Crater stellar system
P. Bonifacio (1), E. Caffau (1), S. Zaggia (2), P. Fran\c{c}ois (1,3),, L. Sbordone (4,5), S.M. Andrievsky (6,1), S.A. Korotin (6) ((1) GEPI,, Observatoire de Paris, CNRS, Univ Paris Diderot (2) INAF-OAPD, (3) UPJV, (4), MIA, Chile, (5) PUC, Chile, (6) Department of Astronomy

TL;DR
This study analyzes the chemical composition and stellar populations of the Crater stellar system, revealing its nature as a dwarf galaxy with multiple stellar populations and providing detailed elemental abundances from spectroscopic data.
Contribution
First detailed spectroscopic analysis of Crater's giant stars, confirming its status as a dwarf galaxy and identifying multiple stellar populations with distinct ages.
Findings
Crater stars have metallicities around [Fe/H] = -1.7.
Detected multiple stellar populations with ages 7 Gyr and 2.2 Gyr.
Spectroscopic metallicities agree with previous photometric estimates.
Abstract
We obtained spectra for two giants of Crater (Crater J113613-105227 and Crater J113615-105244) using X-Shooter at the VLT. The spectra have been analysed with the MyGIsFoS code using a grid of synthetic spectra computed from one dimensional, Local Thermodynamic Equilibrium (LTE) model atmospheres. Effective temperature and surface gravity have been derived from photometry measured from images obtained by the Dark Energy Survey. The radial velocities are 144.3+-4.0 km/s for Crater J113613-105227 and and 134.1+-4.0 km/s for Crater J113615-105244. The metallicities are [Fe/H]=-1.73 and [Fe/H]=-1.67, respectively. Beside the iron abundance we could determine abundances for nine elements: Na, Mg, Ca, Ti, V, Cr, Mn, Ni and Ba. For Na and Ba we took into account deviations from LTE, since the corrections are significant. The abundance ratios are similar in the two stars and resemble those of…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
