Unevolved Li-rich stars at low metallicity: a possible formation pathway through novae
Tadafumi Matsuno, Alex Kemp, Ataru Tanikawa, Cheyanne E. Shariat, Kareem J. El-Badry, Emma Dodd, Amina Helmi, Andreas J. Koch-Hansen, Natsuko Yamaguchi, Hongliang Yan

TL;DR
This study investigates the origins of unevolved Li-rich stars at low metallicity, proposing that nova systems involving massive white dwarfs could be a formation pathway, supported by detailed chemical abundance analysis and population synthesis modeling.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed chemical abundance analysis of unevolved Li-rich stars at low metallicity and proposes a nova-related formation pathway supported by population synthesis models.
Findings
Three of four stars show abundance patterns similar to known Li-rich stars.
Significant nitrogen enhancement observed in one star, indicating pollution from a former companion.
Population synthesis suggests nova systems can produce the observed Li enhancements.
Abstract
A small fraction of low-mass stars have been found to have anomalously high Li abundances. Although it has been suggested that mixing during the red giant branch phase can lead to Li production, this method of intrinsic Li production cannot explain Li-rich stars that have not yet undergone the first dredge-up. To obtain clues about the origin of such stars, we present a detailed chemical abundance analysis of four unevolved Li-rich stars with and , dex higher Li abundance than typical unevolved metal-poor stars. One of the stars, Gaia DR3 6334970766103389824 (D25_6334), was serendipitously found in the stellar stream ED-3, and the other three stars have been reported to have massive () non-luminous companions. We show that three of the four stars exhibit abundance patterns similar to those of…
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