Low-mass low-metallicity AGB stars as an efficient i-process site explaining CEMP-rs stars
D. Karinkuzhi (1,2,3), S. Van Eck (2), S. Goriely (2), L. Siess (2),, A. Jorissen (2), T. Merle (2), A. Escorza (2,4), T. Masseron (5,6) ((1)., Department of Physics, Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore, India, (2)., Institut d'Astronomie et d'Astrophysique

TL;DR
This study investigates the origins of CEMP-rs stars, proposing that low-mass, low-metallicity AGB stars experiencing the i-process can explain their unique abundance patterns, challenging the need for an exotic nucleosynthesis site.
Contribution
It introduces a new classification method for CEMP-s and CEMP-rs stars and demonstrates that the i-process in low-mass, low-metallicity AGB stars can account for their observed abundances.
Findings
CEMP-rs stars show characteristics similar to CEMP-s stars with high binarity.
Stellar models suggest low-mass, low-metallicity AGB stars can produce i-process nucleosynthesis.
CEMP-rs stars can be explained without invoking an exotic nucleosynthesis site.
Abstract
Among Carbon-Enhanced Metal-Poor (CEMP) stars, some are found to be enriched in s-process elements (CEMP-s), in r-process elements (CEMP-r) or in both s- and r-process elements (CEMP-rs). The origin of the abundance differences between CEMP-s and CEMP-rs stars is presently unknown. It has been claimed that the i-process, whose site still remains to be identified, could better reproduce CEMP-rs abundances than the s-process. We analyze high-resolution spectra of 25 metal-poor stars, observed with the high-resolution HERMES spectrograph mounted on the Mercator telescope, La Palma, or with the UVES/VLT and HIRES/KECK spectrographs. We propose a new, robust classification method for CEMP-s and CEMP-rs stars using eight heavy element abundances. The abundance profiles of CEMP-s and CEMP-rs stars are derived and there appears to be an abundance continuum between the two stellar classes.…
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