论文标题
来自CA〜II红外三重态非常金属贫困星的准确金属度
Accurate Metallicities for Very Metal-Poor Stars from the Ca~II Infrared Triplet
论文作者
论文摘要
CA〜II H \&K线是从中分辨率光谱中推断出极为金属贫困恒星的金属性的少数功能之一。不幸的是,这些线可能与中间星际介质中产生的吸收重叠,从而引入了衍生金属性的系统误差。 CA〜II红外三重线系的强度也可以在极低的金属度下测量,并且不受星际吸收的影响,但与局部热力学平衡(LTE)有很大的偏离。我们使用最新的非LTE模型(包括最新的原子数据)研究了在极为金属贫困的恒星中采用Ca〜II红外三重态作为金属性指标的可行性。我们发现三重态线表现出可能超过0.5 \,dex的非LTE丰度校正。当使用高分辨率观测值来说明影响CA〜II共振线的星际吸收时,只有较小的LTE偏离的三胞胎和共振线的非LTE丰度之间的一致性是极好的。与LTE估计值相比,非LTE效应增强了CA〜II IR三重态线,以非常低的金属率促进测量值,降低到$ \ rm [Fe/H] = -6.0 $。由于仪器在红色/近红外波长时最敏感,并且覆盖Ca〜I ii IR三重列的仪器最快将很快从Gaia,Desi,Weave和PFS任务中获得,因此该结果对在我们的银河系和其他人中发现原始恒星的发现具有重要意义。
The Ca~II H \& K lines are among the few features available to infer the metallicity of extremely metal-poor stars from medium-resolution spectroscopy. Unfortunately, these lines can overlap with absorption produced in the intervening interstellar medium, introducing systematic errors in the derived metallicities. The strength of the Ca~II infrared triplet lines can also be measured at extremely low metallicities, and it is not affected by interstellar absorption, but suffers significant departures from Local Thermodynamical Equilibrium (LTE). We investigate the feasibility of adopting the Ca~II infrared triplet as a metallicity indicator in extremely metal-poor stars using state-of-the art Non-LTE models including the most recent atomic data. We find that the triplet lines exhibit Non-LTE abundance corrections that can exceed 0.5\,dex. When interstellar absorption affecting the Ca~II resonance lines is accounted for using high-resolution observations, the agreement between Non-LTE abundances for the triplet and those for the resonance lines, with only minor departures from LTE, is excellent. Non-LTE effects strengthen the Ca~II IR triplet lines, facilitating measurements at very low metallicities, compared with LTE estimates, down to $\rm [Fe/H]=-6.0$. This result has important implications for the discovery of primitive stars in our Galaxy and others, since instruments are most sensitive at red/near-infrared wavelengths, and tens of millions of spectra covering the Ca~II IR triplet will soon become available from the Gaia, DESI, WEAVE, and PFS missions.