The evolution of Lithium: implications of a universal Spite plateau
Francesca Matteucci, Marta Molero, David S. Aguado, Donatella Romano

TL;DR
This paper investigates the universality of the Spite plateau in lithium abundance across different galaxy types, using chemical evolution models to compare observed and predicted Li levels, and discusses implications for the cosmological Li problem.
Contribution
It introduces detailed chemical evolution models for dwarf galaxies that support the idea of a universal Spite plateau, linking stellar and cosmological Li abundances.
Findings
Dwarf galaxies exhibit a Spite plateau similar to the Milky Way.
Models show Li evolution consistent with a universal plateau.
Implications for the cosmological Li problem are discussed.
Abstract
The cosmological {7Li problem consists in explaining why the primordial Li abundance, as predicted by the standard Big Bang nucleosynthesis theory with constraints from WMAP and Planck, is a factor of 3 larger than the Li abundance measured in the stars of the Spite plateau defined by old, warm dwarf stars of the Milky Way halo. Several explanations have been proposed to explain this difference, including various Li depletion processes as well as non standard Big Bang nucleosynthesis, but the main question remains unanswered. In this paper, we present detailed chemical evolution models for dwarf spheroidal and ultra faint galaxies, compute the galactic evolution of 7Li abundance in these objects and compare it with observations of similar objects. In our models, Li is mainly produced by novae and cosmic rays and to a minor extent by low and intermediate mass stars. We adopt the yield…
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