Discovery of a thin lithium plateau among metal-poor red giant branch stars
A. Mucciarelli, L. Monaco, P. Bonifacio, M. Salaris, M. Deal, M., Spite, O. Richard, R. Lallement

TL;DR
This study reveals a consistent lithium abundance plateau among metal-poor red giant branch stars, suggesting the initial lithium abundance aligns with cosmological predictions, challenging previous interpretations of lithium meltdown in dwarf stars.
Contribution
It identifies a distinct lithium plateau in LRGB stars and demonstrates that initial lithium abundance matches cosmological values when including stellar transport processes.
Findings
LRGB stars show a clear lithium plateau at A(Li)=1.09 dex
No lithium meltdown signature in LRGB stars
Initial A(Li) likely matches cosmological predictions
Abstract
The surface lithium abundance A(Li) of warm metal-poor dwarf stars exhibits a narrow plateau down to [Fe/H]~-2.8 dex, while at lower metallicities the average value drops by 0.3 dex with a significant star-by-star scatter (called lithium meltdown). This behaviour is in conflict with predictions of standard stellar evolution models calculated with the initial A(Li) provided by the standard Big Bang nucleosynthesis. The lower red giant branch (LRGB) stars provide a complementary tool to understand the initial A(Li) distribution in metal-poor stars. We have collected a sample of high-resolution spectra of 58 LRGB stars spanning a range of [Fe/H] between ~ -7.0 dex and ~ -1.3 dex. The LRGB stars display an A(Li) distribution clearly different from that of the dwarfs, without signatures of a meltdown and with two distinct components: (a) a thin A(Li) plateau with an average A(Li)=1.09+-0.01…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Educational Leadership and Practices
