The Gaia-ESO survey: 3D NLTE abundances in the open cluster NGC 2420 suggest atomic diffusion and turbulent mixing at the origin of chemical abundance variations
Ekaterina Semenova, Maria Bergemann, Morgan Deal, Aldo Serenelli,, Camilla Juul Hansen, Andrew Gallagher, Amelia Bayo, Thomas Bensby, Angela, Bragaglia, Giovanni Carraro, Lorenzo Morbidelli, Elena Pancino, Rodolfo, Smiljanic

TL;DR
This study uses high-quality spectroscopic data from the Gaia-ESO survey to analyze chemical abundances in stars of the open cluster NGC 2420, providing insights into atomic diffusion and mixing processes affecting stellar evolution.
Contribution
It offers new constraints on stellar interior models by combining NLTE abundance measurements with evolutionary models including atomic diffusion and turbulent mixing.
Findings
Fe, Mg, Ca show depletion at the turn-off and increase near the RGB base.
Li abundance trends indicate rotational mixing and abrupt depletion on the subgiant branch.
Results constrain the turbulent mixing zone in stellar interiors.
Abstract
Atomic diffusion and mixing processes in stellar interiors influence the structure and the surface composition of stars. Some of these processes cannot yet be modelled from the first principles. This limits their applicability in stellar models used for studies of stellar populations and Galactic evolution. Our main goal is to put constrains on the stellar structure and evolution models using new refined measurements of chemical composition in stars of Galactic open cluster. We use medium-resolution, 19 200 <= R <= 21 500, optical spectra of the stars in the open cluster NGC 2420 obtained within the Gaia-ESO survey. The sample covers all evolutionary stages from the main-sequence to red giant branch. Stellar parameters are derived using a combined Bayesian analysis of spectra, 2MASS photometry, and astrometric data from Gaia DR2. The abundances of Mg, Ca, Fe, and Li are determined from…
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