The nature of the Li enrichment in the most Li-rich giant star
Hong-Liang Yan, Jian-Rong Shi, Yu-Tao Zhou, Yong-Shou Chen, Er-Tao Li,, Suyalatu Zhang, Shao-Lan Bi, Ya-Qian Wu, Zhi-Hong Li, Bing Guo, Wei-Ping Liu,, Qi Gao, Jun-Bo Zhang, Ze-Ming Zhou, Hai-Ning Li, Gang Zhao

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of the most Li-rich giant star to date, with a super-high lithium abundance, and investigates its origin and evolution through detailed nuclear simulations, providing new insights into stellar Li production.
Contribution
The study presents the discovery of the most Li-rich giant star and offers a detailed nuclear simulation explaining Li production via $^{7}$Be transportation during the red giant phase.
Findings
Star has a Li abundance of 4.51, the highest recorded.
Li enrichment occurs during the luminosity bump on the red giant branch.
Low-mass giants can produce high Li levels internally through $^{7}$Be transport.
Abstract
About one percent of giants\upcite{Brown1989} are detected to have anomalously high lithium (Li) abundances in their atmospheres, conflicting directly with the prediction of the standard stellar evolution models\upcite{Iben1967}, and making the production and evolution of Li more intriguing, not only in the sense of the Big Bang nucleosynthesis\upcite{Cyburt2016,Spite1982} or the Galactic medium\upcite{Tajitsu2015}, but also the evolution of stars. Decades of efforts have been put into explaining why such outliers exist\upcite{Sackmann1999, Denissenkov2004, Charbonnel2010}, yet the origins of Li-rich giants are still being debated. Here we report the discovery of the most Li-rich giant known to date, with a super-high Li abundance of 4.51. This rare phenomenon was snapshotted together with another short-term event that the star is experiencing its luminosity bump on the red giant…
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