Something borrowed, something blue: The nature of blue metal-poor stars inferred from their colours and chemical abundances
C. J. Hansen, P. Jofre, A. Koch, A McWilliam, C. S. Sneden

TL;DR
This study combines photometry and spectroscopy to distinguish the origins of blue metal-poor stars, revealing their binary or single status and chemical properties, which sheds light on their evolutionary history and potential extragalactic origins.
Contribution
It introduces a photometric cut using V-Ks colours to classify blue metal-poor stars as binaries or singles, enhancing understanding of their origins and evolutionary processes.
Findings
97% of BMP binaries have V-Ks_0 < 1.08
Photometric criteria can classify stars without radial velocities
Chemical analysis confirms binary and single star distinctions
Abstract
Blue metal-poor stars (BMPs) are main sequence stars that appear bluer and more luminous than normal turnoff stars. They were originally singled out by using B-V and U-B colour cuts. Early studies found that a larger fraction of field BMP stars were binaries compared to normal halo stars. Thus, BMP stars are ideal field blue straggler candidates for investigating internal stellar evolution processes and binary interaction. In particular, the presence or depletion in lithium in their spectra is a powerful indicator as to their origin. They are either old, halo blue stragglers experiencing internal mixing processes or mass transfer (Li-depletion), or intermediate-age, single stars of possibly extragalactic origin (2.2dex halo plateau Li). However, we note that internal mixing processes can lead to an increased level of Li. Hence, this study combines photometry and spectroscopy to unveil…
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