scholarly journals Chemically Peculiar A and F Stars with Enhanced s-process and Iron-peak Elements: Stellar Radiative Acceleration at Work

2020 ◽  
Vol 898 (1) ◽  
pp. 28
Author(s):  
Mao-Sheng Xiang ◽  
Hans-Walter Rix ◽  
Yuan-Sen Ting ◽  
Hans-Günter Ludwig ◽  
Johanna Coronado ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
J M Seach ◽  
S C Marsden ◽  
B D Carter ◽  
C Neiner ◽  
C P Folsom ◽  
...  

Abstract We present a spectropolarimetric magnetic snapshot survey of 55 stars which includes 53 F-type stars ranging from spectral types F0 to F9 plus 2 chemically peculiar stars β CrB, and δ Cap. We look for magnetic fields in stars spanning a range of effective temperatures where the transition from fossil to dynamo magnetic fields is believed to occur. High-resolution spectropolarimetry using circularly polarized spectra is used to look for a magnetic detection in the Stokes V profile, determine the mean longitudinal magnetic field (Bl), and to look for correlations with stellar parameters. Surface magnetic fields are detected on 14 F-stars, and present in every spectral class from F3V-F9V ranging in strength from 0.3 ± 0.1 G (36 UMa, F8V) to 8.3 ± 0.9 G (h Dra, F8V). Thus we find photospheric magnetic fields are present in stars as early as spectral type F3V with an outer convection zone thickness less than a few per cent of the stellar radius.



2014 ◽  
Vol 23 (3-4) ◽  
Author(s):  
L. Sapar ◽  
A. Sapar ◽  
R. Poolamäe ◽  
A. Aret

AbstractDiffusional separation of calcium isotopes in the atmospheres of hot chemically peculiar stars is studied. In addition to the usual radiative acceleration effect, the light-induced drift is taken into account. We propose that microturbulence in stable stellar atmospheres is generated by the interaction between plasma particles and radiative flux. Formulae for the microturbulent velocity and microturbulence diffusion coefficient are derived. Data on isotopic and hyperfine splitting of the calcium spectral lines have been collected as an input file. The equilibrium Ca isotope concentrations are found in model computations, iteratively correcting the radiative acceleration values. The general picture of Ca isotope stratification is found to be similar to our previous results obtained for Hg isotopes: dominating overabundance of the heaviest isotope. Diffusional stratification of Ca isotope concentrations in atmospheres of late B and early A spectral types are computed and visualized in figures. The isotope abundances on the inner boundary surface were fixed to be the solar ones. The computed Ca II infrared triplet line profiles are compared with the observed line profiles in a high-dispersion spectrum of HD 175640.



1988 ◽  
Vol 108 ◽  
pp. 2-2
Author(s):  
Jun Jugaku

AbstractAlthough once it was thought that main-sequence stars are remarkably homogeneous with respect to their chemical composition, the upper main-sequence stars (30000 > Te > 7000) show a variaety of chemically peculiar stars besides the so-called normal stars. Those include the Am, Ap, λ Bootis, He-deficient, and He-rich stars. This review summarizes the current data, which are necessary to construct and test the theoretical models of these stars. In the second half of the review we concentrate on Li. In the lower main-sequecnce stars abundances of Li have been determined in hundreds of stars. Some of the remarkable results are: (1) A uniform upper abundance value irrespective of stellar effective temperature, (2) abundance gap in the F stars of the Hyades, and (3) increasing depletion with smaller stellar mass for the Hyades.





1988 ◽  
Vol 108 ◽  
pp. 13-14
Author(s):  
Sylvie Vauclair

The “lithium gap” observed in the Hyades and other galactic clusters by Ann Boesgaard and her collaborators (Boesgaard and Tripicco 1986, Boesgaard 1987, Boesgaard, Budge and Burck 1987) gives a challenge to theoreticians. Indeed a good fit between the theoretical results and the observations will give a clue for our understanding of the stellar internal structure and evolution.A theoretical explanation of the “lithium gap” by gravitational and radiative diffusion has been proposed by Michaud 1986. In G type stars, the convection zone is too deep for gravitational settling to take place: the density at the bottom of the convection zone is so large that the diffusion time scale exceeds the age of the star. Increasing the effective temperature leads to a decrease of the convection zone, and consequently to a decrease of the diffusion time scale. In F stars it becomes smaller than the stellar age, leading qualitatively to a lithium abundance decrease as observed. When the convection zone is shallow enough, the radiative acceleration on lithium becomes important as lithium is in the hydrogenic form of li III (while it is a bare nucleus, li IV, deeper in the star). This radiative acceleration may prevent lithium settling for hotter F stars. This is a very attractive explanation, which leads to a minimum of the lithium abundance nearly at the place where it is observed in effective temperature. However it suffers from some difficulties: the theory predicts an increase of the lithium abundance larger than normal in the hottest F stars, which is not observed, and the predicted minimum lithium abundance is one or two orders of magnitude higher than the minimum observed in the Hyades. The former may be overcome if mass loss occurs in these stars (Michaud 86). Let us focus on the latter.



2020 ◽  
Vol 498 (3) ◽  
pp. 4272-4286
Author(s):  
Simon J Murphy ◽  
Hideyuki Saio ◽  
Masahide Takada-Hidai ◽  
Donald W Kurtz ◽  
Hiromoto Shibahashi ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Strong magnetic fields in chemically peculiar A-type (Ap) stars typically suppress low-overtone pressure modes (p modes) but allow high-overtone p modes to be driven. KIC 11296437 is the first star to show both. We obtained and analysed a Subaru spectrum, from which we show that KIC 11296437 has abundances similar to other magnetic Ap stars, and we estimate a mean magnetic field modulus of 2.8 ± 0.5 kG. The same spectrum rules out a double-lined spectroscopic binary, and we use other techniques to rule out binarity over a wide parameter space, so the two pulsation types originate in one δ Sct–roAp hybrid pulsator. We construct stellar models depleted in helium and demonstrate that helium settling is second to magnetic damping in suppressing low-overtone p modes in Ap stars. We compute the magnetic damping effect for selected p and g modes, and find that modes with frequencies similar to the fundamental mode are driven for polar field strengths ≲4 kG, while other low-overtone p modes are driven for polar field strengths up to ∼1.5 kG. We find that the high-order g modes commonly observed in γ Dor stars are heavily damped by polar fields stronger than 1–4 kG, with the damping being stronger for higher radial orders. We therefore explain the observation that no magnetic Ap stars have been observed as γ Dor stars. We use our helium-depleted models to calculate the δ Sct instability strip for metallic-lined A (Am) stars, and find that driving from a Rosseland mean opacity bump at ∼5 × 104 K caused by the discontinuous H-ionization edge in bound-free opacity explains the observation of δ Sct pulsations in Am stars.



1991 ◽  
Vol 130 ◽  
pp. 342-346
Author(s):  
John D. Landstreet

AbstractThe boundary between Ap-type magnetic fields and the magnetic fields of solar-type stars occurs near Te ~ 7000K, about where deep envelope convection develops in main sequence stars. This seems natural for solar-type stars, in which the field is generated by the convection zone. However, among magnetic Ap stars the frequency of occurrence declines from about 10% of all A stars near A0 to about 1% near F0. It is not clear what produces this decline in frequency, but the convection zone is probably not responsible. In fact, it seems likely that if global fossil fields occur in main sequence F stars, such fields should be detectable even if the stars having them are not chemically peculiar.



1993 ◽  
Vol 137 ◽  
pp. 246-259 ◽  
Author(s):  
Georges Michaud ◽  
C.R. Proffitt

AbstractThe effect of gravitational settling and radiation driven diffusion on the evolution of stars near the main sequence is reviewed. New simplified formulae for calculating diffusion are proposed that improve on previous such formulae. The reliability of available diffusion coefficients is discussed and areas where further work is needed are identified. Newly available opacity calculations are used to estimate the effects of radiative acceleration on Fe.The size of the modifications to the evolution are shown to be modest: a reduction of order 10% on the evolutionary age of globular clusters. There are indications from the Li abundance in the high Teff halo stars that some turbulence is present below the convection zone. Models calibrated using solar properties reproduce the Teff at which the Li gap is observed in F stars as well as its depth without any arbitrary parameter. Similarly the presence of AmFm stars is explained over the Teff range where they are observed.



1966 ◽  
Vol 24 ◽  
pp. 170-180
Author(s):  
D. L. Crawford

Early in the 1950's Strömgren (1, 2, 3, 4, 5) introduced medium to narrow-band interference filter photometry at the McDonald Observatory. He used six interference filters to obtain two parameters of astrophysical interest. These parameters he calledlandc, for line and continuum hydrogen absorption. The first measured empirically the absorption line strength of Hβby means of a filter of half width 35Å centered on Hβand compared to the mean of two filters situated in the continuum near Hβ. The second index measured empirically the Balmer discontinuity by means of a filter situated below the Balmer discontinuity and two above it. He showed that these two indices could accurately predict the spectral type and luminosity of both B stars and A and F stars. He later derived (6) an indexmfrom the same filters. This index was a measure of the relative line blanketing near 4100Å compared to two filters above 4500Å. These three indices confirmed earlier work by many people, including Lindblad and Becker. References to this earlier work and to the systems discussed today can be found in Strömgren's article inBasic Astronomical Data(7).



2005 ◽  
Vol 17 ◽  
pp. 345-348 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Silaj ◽  
A. Townshend ◽  
F. Kupka ◽  
J. Landstreet ◽  
A. Sigut


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