Tracking the evolution of lithium in giants using asteroseismology: Super-Li-rich stars are almost exclusively young red-clump stars
Raghubar Singh, Bacham E. Reddy, Simon W. Campbell, Yerra Bharat, Kumar, Mathieu Vrard

TL;DR
This study combines asteroseismic data and lithium measurements to show that super-Li-rich giant stars are nearly all young red-clump stars, indicating lithium production occurs shortly after the core helium flash.
Contribution
It provides new observational evidence linking lithium enrichment to the early phase of the red-clump stage using combined asteroseismic and abundance data.
Findings
Super-Li-rich giants are almost exclusively young red-clump stars.
Li-enrichment occurs within 40 Myr after the core helium flash.
Lithium abundance drops by about 3 orders of magnitude from young to evolved red-clump stars.
Abstract
We report novel observational evidence on the evolutionary status of lithium-rich giant stars by combining asteroseismic and lithium abundance data. Comparing observations and models of the asteroseismic gravity-mode period spacing , we find that super-Li-rich giants (SLR, A(Li)~~dex) are almost exclusively young red-clump (RC) stars. Depending on the exact phase of evolution, which requires more data to refine, SLR stars are either (i) less than ~Myr or (ii) less than ~Myr past the main core helium flash (CHeF). Our observations set a strong upper limit for the time of the inferred Li-enrichment phase of ~Myr post-CHeF, lending support to the idea that lithium is produced around the time of the CHeF. In contrast, the more evolved RC stars (~Myr post-CHeF) generally have low lithium abundances (A(Li)~~dex). Between the young,…
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