Solar twins and the Barium puzzle
Arumalla B. S. Reddy, David L. Lambert

TL;DR
This study resolves the barium puzzle by showing that the observed Ba overabundance in young stars is due to analysis artifacts, not actual nucleosynthesis differences, through high-precision spectra of solar twins.
Contribution
It demonstrates that the apparent Ba overabundance in young stars results from LTE analysis limitations, not true stellar composition variations.
Findings
Ba overabundance is due to overestimation from LTE analysis.
Microturbulence adjustments correct the Ba abundance discrepancy.
La-Sm abundances remain unaffected by microturbulence changes.
Abstract
Several abundance analyses of Galactic open clusters (OCs) have shown a tendency for Ba but not for other heavy elements (LaSm) to increase sharply with decreasing age such that Ba was claimed to reach [Ba/Fe] in the youngest clusters (ages 100 Myr) rising from [Ba/Fe] dex in solar-age clusters. Within the formulation of the -process, the difficulty to replicate higher Ba abundance and normal LaSm abundances in young clusters is known as {\it the barium puzzle}. Here, we investigate the barium puzzle using extremely high-resolution and high signal-to-noise spectra of 24 solar twins and measured the heavy elements Ba, La, Ce, Nd and Sm with a precision of 0.03 dex. We demonstrate that the enhanced Ba {\scs II} relative to LaSm seen among solar twins, stellar associations and OCs at young ages (100 Myr) is unrelated to aspects of stellar…
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