Accretion of planetary matter and the lithium problem in the 16 Cygni stellar system
Morgan Deal, Olivier Richard, Sylvie Vauclair

TL;DR
This study models the 16 Cygni system to explain the lithium depletion in one star through planetary matter accretion and fingering convection, revealing that small amounts of accreted material can account for observed lithium differences.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed stellar evolution model incorporating accretion-induced fingering convection to explain lithium depletion in planet-hosting stars.
Findings
Accretion of Earth-mass planetary material can explain lithium depletion.
Fingering convection transports lithium to nuclear layers, causing surface depletion.
Heavy element surface abundances remain unchanged by accretion.
Abstract
The 16 Cyg system is composed of two solar analogs with similar masses and ages. A red dwarf is in orbit around 16 Cyg A whereas 16 Cyg B hosts a giant planet. The abundances of heavy elements are similar in the two stars but lithium is much more depleted in 16 Cyg B that in 16 Cyg A, by a factor of at least 4.7. The interest of studying the 16 Cyg system is that the two star have the same age and the same initial composition. The presently observed differences must be due to their different evolution, related to the fact that one of them hosts a planet contrary to the other one. We computed models of the two stars which precisely fit the observed seismic frequencies. We used the Toulouse Geneva Evolution Code (TGEC) that includes complete atomic diffusion (including radiative accelerations). We compared the predicted surface abundances with the spectroscopic observations and confirmed…
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