GRACES observations of young [alpha/Fe]-rich stars
David Yong, Luca Casagrande, Kim A. Venn, Andre-Nicolas Chene, Jared, Keown, Lison Malo, Eder Martioli, Alan Alves-Brito, Martin Asplund, Aaron, Dotter, Sarah L. Martell, Jorge Melendez, Katharine J. Schlesinger

TL;DR
This study investigates four young, alpha-enhanced red giant stars, finding no chemical anomalies but suggesting they may be evolved blue stragglers due to potential binary nature and debris disks, challenging their apparent youth.
Contribution
First detailed high-resolution spectroscopic analysis of young alpha-rich giants, exploring their chemical properties and possible blue straggler origins.
Findings
Stars have enhanced alpha/Fe ratios and are slightly metal poor.
No chemical anomalies found compared to similar giants.
Evidence suggests some stars may be evolved blue stragglers with debris disks.
Abstract
We measure chemical abundance ratios and radial velocities in four massive (i.e., young) [alpha/Fe]-rich red giant stars using high-resolution high-S/N spectra from ESPaDOnS fed by Gemini-GRACES. Our differential analysis ensures that our chemical abundances are on the same scale as the Alves-Brito et al. (2010) study of bulge, thin and thick disk red giants. We confirm that the program stars have enhanced [alpha/Fe] ratios and are slightly metal poor. Aside from lithium enrichment in one object, the program stars exhibit no chemical abundance anomalies when compared to giant stars of similar metallicity throughout the Galaxy. This includes the elements Li, O, Si, Ca, Ti, Cr, Ni, Cu, Ba, La, and Eu. Therefore, there are no obvious chemical signatures that can help to reveal the origin of these unusual stars. While our new observations show that only one star (not the Li-rich object)…
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