4.6 Article

Manganese abundances in Galactic bulge red giants

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 559, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/201322380

Keywords

stars: abundances; stars: late-type; Galaxy: abundances; Galaxy: bulge

Funding

  1. CNPq
  2. FAPESP
  3. Fondecyt [1110393, 1130196]
  4. BASAL Center for Astrophysics and Associated Technologies [PFB-06]
  5. FONDAP Center for Astrophysics [15010003]
  6. Proyecto Anillo [ACT-86]
  7. Chilean Ministry for the Economy, Development, and Tourism Programa Iniciativa Cientifica Milenio [P07-021-F]
  8. FAPESP [2012/05142-5]

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Context. Manganese is mainly produced in type II SNe during explosive silicon burning, in incomplete Si-burning regions, and depends on several nucleosynthesis environment conditions, such as mass cut between the matter ejected and falling back onto the remnant, electron and neutron excesses, mixing fallback, and explosion energy. Manganese is also produced in type Ia SNe. Aims. The aim of this work is the study of abundances of the iron-peak element Mn in 56 bulge giants, among which 13 are red clump stars. Four bulge fields along the minor axis are inspected. The study of abundances of Mn-over-Fe as a function of metallicity in the Galactic bulge may shed light on its production mechanisms. Methods. High-resolution spectra were obtained using the FLAMES+ UVES spectrograph on the Very Large Telescope. The spectra were obtained within a program to observe 800 stars using the GIRAFFE spectrograph, together with the present UVES spectra. Results. We aim at identifying the chemical evolution of manganese, as a function of metallicity, in the Galactic bulge. We find [Mn/Fe] similar to -0.7 at [Fe/H] similar to -1.3, increasing to a solar value at metallicities close to solar, and showing a spread around -0.7 less than or similar to [Fe/H] less than or similar to -0.2, in good agreement with other work on Mn in bulge stars. There is also good agreement with chemical evolution models. We find no clear difference in the behaviour of the four bulge fields. Whereas [Mn/Fe] vs. [Fe/H] could be identified with the behaviour of the thick disc stars, [Mn/O] vs. [O/H] has a behaviour running parallel, at higher metallicities, compared to thick disc stars, indicating that the bulge enrichment might have proceeded differently from that of the thick disc.

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