Back to Search Start Over

Extremely metal-poor stars in SDSS fields

Authors :
Bonifacio, Piercarlo
Caffau, Elisabetta
François, Patrick
Sbordone, Luca
Ludwig, Hans-G.
Spite, Monique
Molaro, Paolo
Spite, François
Cayrel, Roger
Hammer, François
Hill, Vanessa
Nonino, Mario
Randich, Sofia
Stelzer, Beate
Zaggia, Simone
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Some insight on the first generation of stars can be obtained from the chemical composition of their direct descendants, extremely metal-poor stars (EMP), with metallicity less than or equal to 1/1000 of the solar metalllicity. Such stars are exceedingly rare, the most successful surveys, for this purpose, have so far provided only about 100 stars with 1/1000 the solar metallicity and 4 stars with about 1/10000 of the solar metallicity. The Sloan Digital Sky Survey has the potential to provide a large number of candidates of extremely low metallicity. X-Shooter has the unique capability of performing the necessary follow-up spectroscopy providing accurate metallicities and abundance ratios for several elements (Mg, Al, Ca, Ti, Cr, Sr,...) for EMP candidates. We here report on the results for the first two stars observed in the course of our franco-italian X-Shooter GTO. The two stars were targeted to be of metallicity around -3.0, the analysis of the X-Shooter spectra showed them to be of metallicity around -2.0, but with a low alpha to iron ratio, which explains the underestimate of the metallicity from the SDSS spectra. The efficiency of X-Shooter allows an in situ study of the outer Halo, for the two stars studied here we estimate distances of 3.9 and 9.1 Kpc, these are likely the most distant dwarf stars studied in detail to date.<br />Comment: Invited review at the Conference: X-shooter 2010: in memory of R. Pallavicini, To be published on Astronomische Nachrichten, 1 reference changed, tables 2 and 3 sorted by atomic number

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1101.3139
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/asna.201111528