The physical mechanism behind M dwarf metallicity indicators and the role of C and O abundances
Mark J. Veyette, Philip S. Muirhead, Andrew W. Mann, and France Allard

TL;DR
This study investigates how variations in carbon and oxygen abundances influence metallicity indicators in M dwarf stars, revealing that C/O ratios significantly affect spectral features and metallicity estimates, with implications for stellar characterization.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates that C and O abundances critically impact M dwarf metallicity indicators and introduces the potential of low-resolution NIR spectra to measure C/O ratios.
Findings
C/O ratio significantly affects metallicity indicators.
Variation in [(O-C)/Fe] explains the primary physical mechanism behind metallicity tracers.
Flux-calibrated NIR spectra can help measure C and O abundances in M dwarfs.
Abstract
We present NIR synthetic spectra based on PHOENIX stellar atmosphere models of typical early and mid M dwarfs with varied C and O abundances. We apply multiple recently published methods for determining M dwarf metallicity to our models to determine the effect of C and O abundances on metallicity indicators. We find that the pseudo-continuum level is very sensitive to C/O and that all metallicity indicators show a dependence on C and O abundances, especially in lower Teff models. In some cases the inferred metallicity ranges over a full order of magnitude (>1 dex) when [C/Fe] and [O/Fe] are varied independently by +/-0.2. We also find that [(O-C)/Fe], the difference in O and C abundances, is a better tracer of the pseudo-continuum level than C/O. Models of mid-M dwarfs with [C/Fe], [O/Fe], and [M/H] that are realistic in the context of galactic chemical evolution suggest that variation…
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