Chemical Compositions of Red Giant Stars from Habitable Zone Planet Finder Spectroscopy
Christopher Sneden, Melike Afsar, Zeynep Bozkurt, Gamze Bocek Topcu,, Sergen Ozdemir, Gregory R. Zeimann, Cynthia S. Froning, Suvrath Mahadevan,, Joe P. Ninan, Chad F. Bender, Ryan Terrien, Lawrence W. Ramsey, 9 Karin Lind,, Gregory N. Mace, Kyle F. Kaplan, Hwihyun Kim

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution near-infrared spectra from the Habitable Zone Planet Finder to analyze chemical compositions of various red giant stars, expanding spectral data and confirming abundance measurements across different wavelength regions.
Contribution
First detailed near-infrared spectral analysis of red giant stars using HPF, providing new abundance data for species with limited optical spectral representation.
Findings
Good agreement between HPF and optical/infrared metallicities.
Ability to derive abundances of species with poor optical data.
Detection of low-metallicity sulfur and carbon in HD 122563.
Abstract
We have used the Habitable Zone Planet Finder (HPF) to gather high resolution, high signal-to-noise near-infrared spectra of 13 field red horizontal-branch (RHB) stars, one open-cluster giant, and one very metal-poor halo red giant. The HPF spectra cover the 0.811.28 \micron\ wavelength range of the bands, filling in the gap between the optical (0.41.0~\micron) and infrared (1.52.4~\micron) spectra already available for the program stars. We derive abundances of 17 species from LTE-based computations involving equivalent widths and spectrum syntheses, and estimate abundance corrections for the species that are most affected by departures from LTE in RHB stars. Generally good agreement is found between HPF-based metallicities and abundance ratios and those from the optical and infrared spectral regions. Light element transitions dominate the HPF spectra of these red…
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