Identification of a Group III CEMP-no Star in the Dwarf Spheroidal Galaxy Canes Venatici I
Jinmi Yoon, Devin D. Whitten, Timothy C. Beers, Young Sun Lee, Thomas, Masseron, and Vinicius M. Placco

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a likely Group III CEMP-no star in the dwarf galaxy Canes Venatici I, using a new technique to analyze medium-resolution spectra of cool, metal-poor stars, revealing insights into early galaxy evolution.
Contribution
Introduces a method to analyze cool CEMP stars at medium resolution and identifies the first Group III CEMP-no star in CVn I, expanding understanding of early stellar populations.
Findings
Identified a new Group III CEMP-no star in CVn I.
Developed a technique to mitigate carbon-veiling in spectra.
Confirmed the star's parameters indicating an extremely metal-poor population.
Abstract
CEMP-no stars, a subclass of carbon-enhanced metal-poor (CEMP) stars, are one of the most significant stellar populations in Galactic Archaeology, because they dominate the low end of the metallicity distribution function, providing information on the early star-formation and chemical-evolution history of the Milky Way and its satellite galaxies. Here we present an analysis of medium-resolution () optical spectroscopy for a CEMP giant, SDSS J132755.56+333521.7, observed with the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT), one of the brightest () members of the classical dwarf spheroidal galaxy, Canes Venatici I (CVn I). Many CEMP stars discovered to date have very cool effective temperatures ( K), resulting in strong veiling by molecular carbon bands over their optical spectra at low/medium spectral resolution. We introduce a technique to mitigate…
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