Is beryllium ultra-depletion in solar-type stars linked to the presence of a white dwarf companion?
S. Desidera, V. D'Orazi, M. Lugaro

TL;DR
This study suggests a link between extreme beryllium depletion in solar-type stars and the presence of white dwarf companions, possibly caused by stellar interactions affecting surface abundances.
Contribution
It provides evidence that white dwarf companions may cause beryllium depletion through stellar interactions, a novel insight into stellar chemical anomalies.
Findings
All ultra-depleted Be stars studied are binaries.
Some companions are confirmed white dwarfs, others are uncertain.
Interaction with white dwarf progenitors may alter surface abundances.
Abstract
Abundance studies of solar-type stars revealed a small fraction of objects with extreme depletion of beryllium. We investigate the possible link between the beryllium depletion and the presence of companions. The classical methods (radial velocity, astrometry, imaging) used to search for binary companions were exploited. We also performed a chemical analysis to identify binaries by the alteration in abundances that is produced by the accretion of material lost by a former evolved companion. We found that all the four previously investigated stars that were found to be ultra--depleted in Be are binaries. In two cases the companion is a white dwarf, and in the other two cases the companion might be a white dwarf or a main-sequence star. One new barium star was identified. We speculate that the interaction with the white dwarf progenitor caused an alteration in the abundance pattern of the…
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