Abundances of carbon-enhanced metal-poor stars as constraints on their formation
C.J. Hansen, B. Nordstroem, T.T. Hansen, C.R. Kennedy, V.M. Placco,, T.C. Beers, J. Andersen, G. Cescutti, C. Chiappini

TL;DR
This study analyzes the chemical abundances of 27 metal-poor stars to classify them into CEMP sub-classes and infer their formation sites, using moderate-resolution spectra to improve understanding of early stellar evolution.
Contribution
It demonstrates that low S/N X-shooter spectra can effectively classify CEMP stars and provides insights into their formation environments and progenitors.
Findings
17 stars are CEMP-s, 3 are CEMP-no, 7 are normal.
[C/N] ratios identify stars unaffected by internal mixing.
[Sr/Ba] ratios distinguish between progenitor types.
Abstract
An increasing fraction of carbon-enhanced metal-poor (CEMP) stars is found as their iron abundance, [Fe/H], decreases below [Fe/H] = -2.0. The CEMP-s stars have the highest absolute carbon abundances, [C/H], and are thought to owe their enrichment in carbon and the slow neutron-capture (s-process) elements to mass transfer from a former asymptotic giant-branch (AGB) binary companion. The most Fe-poor CEMP stars are normally single, exhibit somewhat lower [C/H] than CEMP-s stars, but show no s-process element enhancement (CEMP-no stars). CNO abundance determinations offer clues to their formation sites. C, N, Sr, and Ba abundances (or limits) and 12C/13C ratios where possible are derived for a sample of 27 faint metal-poor stars for which the X-shooter spectra have sufficient S/N ratios. These moderate resolution, low S/N (~10-40) spectra prove sufficient to perform limited chemical…
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