Mono-enriched stars and Galactic chemical evolution -- Possible biases in observations and theory
Camilla Juul Hansen, Andreas Koch, Lyudmila Mashonkina, Mattis Magg,, Maria Bergemann, Tatyana Sitnova, Andrew J. Gallagher, Ilya Ilyin, Elisabetta, Caffau, Huawei W. Zhang, Klauss G. Strassmeier, and Ralf S. Klessen

TL;DR
This study analyzes metal-poor stars to better understand Galactic chemical evolution and the first stars, using advanced modeling to correct biases in abundance measurements and identifying potential mono-enriched second-generation stars.
Contribution
It introduces a method combining LTE, NLTE, and 3D models for more accurate abundance patterns and applies improved fitting techniques to identify true mono-enriched stars.
Findings
Identification of a likely mono-enriched star in the outer halo.
Estimated Pop III progenitor mass of approximately 25.5 solar masses.
Demonstration of biases in simple LTE abundance analyses.
Abstract
A long sought after goal using chemical abundance patterns derived from metal-poor stars is to understand the Galactic chemical evolution (GCE) and to pin down the nature of the first stars (Pop III). Here, we use a sample of 14 metal-poor stars observed with the high-resolution spectrograph PEPSI at the LBT to derive abundances of 32 elements (34 including limits). We present well-sampled abundance patterns for all stars obtained using local thermodynamic equilibrium (LTE) radiative transfer codes and 1D hydrostatic model atmospheres. It is currently well known that the assumptions of 1D and LTE may hide several issues, thereby introducing biases in our interpretation as to the nature of the first stars and the GCE. Hence, we use non-LTE (NLTE) and correct the abundances using 3D model atmospheres to present a physically more reliable pattern. In order to infer the nature of the first…
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