The chemical make-up of the Sun: A 2020 vision
M. Asplund, A. M. Amarsi, N. Grevesse

TL;DR
This study provides a comprehensive reassessment of the Sun's chemical composition using advanced modeling and spectroscopy, confirming previous low abundances of key elements and revealing new insights into solar and meteoritic elemental correlations.
Contribution
It offers updated solar abundances for all 83 long-lived elements using state-of-the-art techniques, refining previous estimates and highlighting discrepancies with traditional meteorite comparisons.
Findings
Confirmed low C, N, O abundances consistent with previous studies.
Revised solar abundances for several elements differ by more than 0.05 dex.
Solar chemical composition resembles CM chondrites more than CI chondrites.
Abstract
The chemical composition of the Sun is a fundamental yardstick in astronomy, relative to which essentially all cosmic objects are referenced. We reassess the solar abundances of all 83 long-lived elements, using highly realistic solar modelling and state-of-the-art spectroscopic analysis techniques coupled with the best available atomic data and observations. Our new improved analysis confirms the relatively low solar abundances of C, N, and O obtained in our previous 3D-based studies: , , and . The revised solar abundances for the other elements also typically agree well with our previously recommended values with just Li, F, Ne, Mg, Cl, Kr, Rb, Rh, Ba, W, Ir, and Pb differing by more than dex. The here advocated present-day photospheric metal mass fraction is only…
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