Radiative levitation in carbon-enhanced metal-poor stars with s-process enrichment
E. Matrozis, R. J. Stancliffe

TL;DR
This study models the post-mass-transfer evolution of CEMP-s stars, revealing that atomic diffusion effects are likely suppressed by additional mixing or mass-loss processes, explaining observed abundance patterns.
Contribution
It introduces models including radiative levitation and diffusion in CEMP-s stars, highlighting the need for extra physical processes to match observed abundance spreads.
Findings
Atomic diffusion effects are too large compared to observations.
Additional mixing or mass-loss can suppress diffusion effects.
Surface abundances are largely unaffected by diffusion due to these processes.
Abstract
A significant fraction of all metal-poor stars are carbon-rich. Most of these carbon-enhanced metal-poor (CEMP) stars also show enhancement in elements produced mainly by the s-process (CEMP-s stars) and evidence suggests that the origin of these non-standard abundances can be traced to mass transfer from a binary asymptotic giant branch (AGB) companion. Thus, observations of CEMP-s stars are commonly used to infer the nucleosynthesis output of low-metallicity AGB stars. A crucial step in this exercise is understanding what happens to the accreted material after mass transfer ceases. Here we present models of the post-mass-transfer evolution of CEMP-s stars considering the physics of thermohaline mixing and atomic diffusion, including radiative levitation. We find that stars with typical CEMP-s star masses (M ~ 0.85 Msun) have very shallow convective envelopes (Menv < 1e-7 Msun). Hence,…
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