The Gaia-ESO Survey: the origin and evolution of s-process elements
L. Magrini, L. Spina, S. Randich, E. Friel, G. Kordopatis, C. Worley,, E. Pancino, A. Bragaglia, P. Donati, G. Tautvaivsiene, V. Bagdonas, E., Delgado-Mena, V. Adibekyan, S. G. Sousa, F. M. Jimenez-Esteban, N. Sanna, V., Roccatagliata, R. Bonito, L. Sbordone, S.Duffau

TL;DR
This study uses Gaia-ESO survey data to analyze the evolution of five s-process elements across different stellar populations, revealing age, metallicity, and galactocentric distance dependencies that inform models of Galactic chemical evolution.
Contribution
It provides the largest homogeneous dataset of s-process element abundances, confirming their increase in younger stars and highlighting their dependence on metallicity and galactic location.
Findings
s-process abundances increase in younger stellar populations
Strong dependence of s-process ratios on metallicity and galactocentric distance
Open clusters show diverse s-process enrichment patterns across the Galaxy
Abstract
Several works have found an increase of the abundances of the s-process neutron-capture elements in the youngest Galactic stellar populations, giving important constraints to stellar and Galactic evolution. We aim to trace the abundance patterns and the time-evolution of five s-process elements in the first peak, Y and Zr, and in the second peak, Ba, La and Ce using the Gaia-ESO idr5 results. From the UVES spectra of cluster member stars, we determined the average composition of clusters with ages >0.1 Gyr. We derived statistical ages and distances of field stars, and we separated them in thin and thick disc populations. We studied the time evolution and dependence on metallicity of abundance ratios using open clusters and field stars. Using our large and homogeneous sample of open clusters, thin and thick disc stars, spanning an age range larger than 10 Gyr, we confirm an increase…
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