Modelling the observed properties of carbon-enhanced metal-poor stars using binary population synthesis
C. Abate, O. R. Pols, R.J. Stancliffe, R. G. Izzard, A. I. Karakas, T., C. Beers, and Y. S. Lee

TL;DR
This study uses binary population synthesis to model and understand the properties and formation scenarios of carbon-enhanced metal-poor stars in the Galactic halo, comparing simulated data with observations to constrain stellar evolution models.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed binary population synthesis approach to reproduce CEMP star fractions and abundance patterns, exploring the effects of various physical parameters and wind mass-transfer processes.
Findings
CEMP fractions in models range from 7% to 17%, matching observations.
Models reproduce observed abundance distributions for CEMP-$s$ stars.
Cannot reproduce high neutron-rich element abundances in CEMP-$s/r$ stars.
Abstract
The stellar population in the Galactic halo is characterised by a large fraction of CEMP stars. Most CEMP stars are enriched in -elements (CEMP- stars), and some of these are also enriched in -elements (CEMP- stars). One formation scenario proposed for CEMP stars invokes wind mass transfer in the past from a TP-AGB primary star to a less massive companion star which is presently observed. We generate low-metallicity populations of binary stars to reproduce the observed CEMP-star fraction. In addition, we aim to constrain our wind mass-transfer model and investigate under which conditions our synthetic populations reproduce observed abundance distributions. We compare the CEMP fractions and the abundance distributions determined from our synthetic populations with observations. Several physical parameters of the binary stellar population of the halo are uncertain, e.g. the…
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