The role of binaries in the enrichment of the early Galactic halo. III. Carbon-enhanced metal-poor stars -- CEMP-s stars
T.T. Hansen, J. Andersen, B. Nordstr\"om, T. C. Beers, V.M. Placco, J., Yoon, L.A. Buchhave

TL;DR
This study investigates the binary nature of CEMP-s stars, revealing a high binary fraction and supporting the mass transfer scenario, while also suggesting external enrichment sources for some single stars, impacting our understanding of early Galactic chemical evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive orbital analysis of CEMP-s stars, confirming high binary frequency and exploring the origins of their chemical peculiarities.
Findings
82% of CEMP-s stars are in binary systems.
Most CEMP-s stars' chemical enrichment is explained by binary mass transfer.
Some single CEMP-s stars likely acquired their enrichment from external sources.
Abstract
Detailed spectroscopic studies of metal-poor halo stars have highlighted the important role of carbon-enhanced metal-poor (CEMP) stars in understanding the early production and ejection of carbon in the Galaxy and in identifying the progenitors of the CEMP stars among the first stars formed after the Big Bang. Recent work has also classified the CEMP stars by absolute carbon abundance, A(C), into high- and low-C bands, mostly populated by binary and single stars, respectively. Our aim is to determine the frequency and orbital parameters of binary systems among the CEMP-s stars, which exhibit strong enhancements of neutron-capture elements associated with the s-process. This allows us to test whether local mass transfer from a binary companion is necessary and sufficient to explain their dramatic carbon excesses. Eighteen of the 22 stars exhibit clear orbital motion, yielding a binary…
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