Discovery of ubiquitous lithium production in low-mass stars
Yerra Bharat Kumar, Bacham E. Reddy, Simon W. Campbell, Sunayana, Maben, Gang Zhao, Yuan-Sen Ting

TL;DR
This study reveals that all low-mass stars in the red clump phase produce significant lithium, contradicting existing stellar models and suggesting a need to redefine lithium-richness criteria.
Contribution
It provides the first large-scale evidence of widespread lithium production in low-mass stars during the red clump phase, challenging current stellar evolution theories.
Findings
All red clump stars have high lithium levels.
Lithium content increases by a factor of 40 after red giant branch.
Only 3% of red clump stars are extremely Li-rich.
Abstract
The vast majority of stars with mass similar to the Sun are expected to only destroy lithium over the course of their lives, via low-temperature nuclear burning. This has now been supported by observations of hundreds of thousands of red giant stars (Brown et al. 1989, Kumar et al. 2011, Deepak et al. 2019, Singh et al. 2019, Casey et al. 2019). Here we perform the first large-scale systematic investigation into the Li content of stars in the red clump phase of evolution, which directly follows the red giant branch phase. Surprisingly we find that all red clump stars have high levels of lithium for their evolutionary stage. On average the lithium content increases by a factor of 40 after the end of the red giant branch stage. This suggests that all low-mass stars undergo a lithium production phase between the tip of the red giant branch and the red clump. We demonstrate that our finding…
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