4.7 Article

The chemical composition of nearby young associations: s-process element abundances in AB Doradus, Carina-Near and Ursa Major

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 423, Issue 3, Pages 2789-2799

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2966.2012.21088.x

Keywords

stars: abundances; open clusters and associations: individual: AB Doradus; open clusters and associations: individual: Carina-Near; open clusters and associations: individual: Ursa Major

Funding

  1. European Southern Observatory [70.D-0081(A), 082.A-9007(A), 083.A-9011(B), 084.A-9011(B)]
  2. INAF Post-doctoral fellowship

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Recently, several studies have shown that young, open clusters are characterized by a considerable overabundance in their barium content. In particular, DOrazi et al. reported that in some younger clusters [Ba/Fe] can reach values as high as similar to 0.6 dex. The work also identified the presence of an anticorrelation between [Ba/Fe] and cluster age. For clusters in the age range similar to 4.5 Gyr-500 Myr, this is best explained by assuming a higher contribution from low-mass asymptotic giant branch stars to the Galactic chemical enrichment. The purpose of this work is to investigate the ubiquity of the barium overabundance in young stellar clusters. We analysed high-resolution spectroscopic data, focusing on the s-process elemental abundance for three nearby young associations, i.e. AB Doradus, Carina-Near and Ursa Major. The clusters have been chosen such that their age spread would complement the DOrazi et al. study. We find that while the s-process elements Y, Zr, La and Ce exhibit solar ratios in all three associations, Ba is overabundant by similar to 0.2 dex. Current theoretical models cannot reproduce this abundance pattern; thus, we investigate whether this unusually large Ba content might be related to chromospheric effects. Although no correlation between [Ba/Fe] and several activity indicators seems to be present, we conclude that different effects could be at work which may (directly or indirectly) be related to the presence of hot stellar chromospheres.

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