NLTE analysis of the methylidyne radical (CH) molecular lines in metal-poor stellar atmospheres
S. A. Popa, R. Hoppe, M. Bergemann, C. J. Hansen, B. Plez, T.C. Beers

TL;DR
This study investigates the non-local thermodynamic equilibrium (NLTE) effects on CH molecular lines in metal-poor stellar atmospheres, revealing significant NLTE impacts on carbon abundance measurements, especially at low metallicities.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed NLTE analysis of CH lines across a range of stellar parameters, highlighting the importance of NLTE corrections in spectroscopic carbon abundance determinations.
Findings
NLTE effects are significant and increase with decreasing metallicity.
Assuming LTE underestimates carbon abundances, especially in metal-poor stars.
NLTE corrections range from +0.04 dex in the Sun to +0.21 dex at [Fe/H] = -4.0.
Abstract
An analysis of the CH molecule in non-local thermodynamic equilibrium (NLTE) is performed for the physical conditions of cool stellar atmospheres typical of red giants (log g = 2.0, Teff = 4500 K) and the Sun. The aim of the present work is to explore whether the G-band of the CH molecule, which is commonly used in abundance diagnostics of Carbon-Enhanced Metal-Poor (CEMP) stars, is sensitive to NLTE effects. LTE and NLTE theoretical spectra are computed with the MULTI code. We use one-dimensional (1D) LTE hydrostatic MARCS model atmospheres with parameters representing eleven red giant stars with metallicities ranging from [Fe/H] = -4.0 to [Fe/H] = 0.0 and carbon-to-iron ratios [C/Fe] = 0.0, +0.7, +1.5, and +3.0. The CH molecule model is represented by 1981 energy levels, 18377 radiative bound-bound transitions, and 932 photo-dissociation reactions. The rates due to transitions caused…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAtmospheric Ozone and Climate · Spectroscopy and Laser Applications · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
