Measuring oxygen abundances from stellar spectra without oxygen lines
Yuan-Sen Ting, Charlie Conroy, Hans-Walter Rix, Martin Asplund

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that oxygen abundances in cool stars can be measured using optical spectra by analyzing molecular features affected indirectly by oxygen, despite the lack of direct oxygen lines.
Contribution
It reveals the physical processes allowing oxygen abundance determination from spectral features not involving oxygen lines, expanding methods for stellar composition analysis.
Findings
Oxygen affects spectral features through the CNO network in molecular bands.
Spectral features from both CO-dominant and atomic carbon regions provide constraints on oxygen.
Physical modeling enables oxygen abundance measurements without direct oxygen lines.
Abstract
Oxygen is the most abundant "metal" element in stars and in the cosmos. But determining oxygen abundances in stars has proven challenging, because of the shortage of detectable atomic oxygen lines in their optical spectra as well as observational and theoretical complications with these lines (e.g., blends, 3D, non-LTE). Nonetheless, Ting et al. (2017) were recently able to demonstrate that oxygen abundances can be determined from low-resolution (R2000) optical spectra. Here we investigate the physical processes that enable such a measurement for cool stars, such as K-giants. We show that the strongest spectral diagnostics of oxygen come from the CNO atomic-molecular network, but are manifested in spectral features that do not involve oxygen. In the outer atmosphere layers most of the carbon is locked up in CO, and changes to the oxygen abundance directly affect the abundances…
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