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NIR High Resolution Stellar Spectroscopic Studies Prospective Abundance Study on M dwarfs with IGRINS Sang Gak Lee (Seoul National University , Department of Physics and Astronomy, Astronomy Program Cosmic Abundance a) the large abundances of H and He; b) the deep “hole” corresponding to Li/Be/B; c) a series of peaks, particularly prominent for the α nuclei, corresponding to the products of stellar burning between mass 12 and mass ∼ 40; d) a mass peak near Fe, A ∼ 56-60; e) rare heavier elements, but with mass peaks near A ∼ 130 and A ∼ 195. Signitures of Nucleosynthesis A) 1H ~ 0.75 4He ~ 0.25 B) 6Li ~ 7.75E-10 7Li ~ 1.13E -8 (BB) 9Be ~ 3.13E-10 10B ~ 5.22E-10 11B ~ 2.30E -9 Li, Be, B : 1. produced in the ISM when energetic cosmic-ray protons collide with elements like C, N. &O 2. synthesized by core-collapse SN, by the interactions of neutrinos in the carbon shells of such stars 3 fragile ~ T > 2.0E6 (6Li), 2.5E6 (7Li), 3.5E6 (9Be), 5.3E6 (10B) 5.0E6 (11B) Signitures of Nucleosynthesis C) a-elements : C, N, O, Ne, Mg, & Si ; tightly bound, thermodynamically-favored products of nuclear burning. 12C ∼ 3.87E-3 14N ∼ 0.94E-3 16O ∼ 8.55E-3 20Ne ∼ 1.34E-3 24Mg ∼ 0.58E-3 28Si ∼ 0.75E-3 D) iron-peak elements :near Fe & Ni ; largest binding energy/nucleon E) the heavy elements, A > 100 :very rare, several abundance peaks ;each peak is actually a double peak, with the two components splits by ~ 10 mass units. (n,g) reactions : produced in ordinary stars with relatively weak neutron sources = s-process, Under explosive conditions (SN or neutron star collision) = r-process Cosmic Chemical Evolution Are the Abundance Patterns of all stars same ? Can we scale down or up the solar abundance pattern by using metallicity ? NO!! What is the meaning of the different abundance pattern? Is star formation rate constant? Is the stellar luminosity function same all the time? Chemical Evolution of the Universe ? High Resolution Stellar Spectra (Large Telescopes) with fundamental physical parameters, such as gf values for absorption lines of elements For Better Abundances, improvements in last 30 years Telescope : factor of 3 light-collecting area Detectors : factor of 50 more efficient Computers : factor of 103 rapid Algorithms : factor of 100 faster Atomic and molecular data : 1-2 order of quality improved High-resol & high-S/N spectra for 105 stars (cf few stars 30 years ago) Abandunce errors Earlier scatter reflects uncertainties in observed data, fundamental parameters, & standard mode atm. Now could be due to different attempts to handle convection, inhomogeneities, & non-LTE Uncertainties in fundamental parameters (Teff, log g, [Fe/H] etc) typical error of 0.1 dex in abundance rel to H and rel to the solar abundances Errors in measurements : similar Error due to non-LTE in and LTE treatment or uncertainties in collision cross sections : 0.1 -0.2 dex for early type main sequence and solar type stars Error due to inhomogeneities and 3-D convection : typically 0.1-0.2 dex for solar types and 2 times larger or even more for certain elements for Pop II stars of similar temperature In general strongly time-dependent lines imply larger errors a-elements [X/Fe] : Si, Ca, C, O, Mg, Ti Odd Z elements, Na & Al Na & Al Fe-peak Elements Co, Cr, Mn, Ni, Cu, Zn K, Sc, V, N K, Sc, V, N Neutron Capture Elements Eu & Ba Late Dwarf Stars Prospective Abundance Study on M dwarfs with IGRINS M dwarfs : Scientific Justification most numerous stars in the Galaxy lifetime on main sequence is longer than the age of universe the chemical evolution of the universe intrinsic faint brightness and the complex optical spectra brightness peaks around the near IR, IGRINS will be the best instruments for chemical abundance study of M dwarfs Pros They are cool to have peak intensity around near IR For abundance study, the continuum is better fitted in IR than in visual to provide the more accurate abundances of elements Their main sequence lifetime is long enough to give solid information about the chemical evolution of the Galaxy, since their surface abundances would represent the material they were formed. SUMMARY We examined the abundances of 15 elements for 52 G-type samples ( PHSs : 34 ) [Mn/Fe] is high for PHSs The more Mn & Zn lines have to be added The synthetic spectrum with hyperfine structure [Sc/Fe] and [Ti/Fe] tend to increase for PHSs in [Fe/H] < 0 Need more samples in [Fe/H] < 0 [Ba/Fe] of single-planet system is higher than that of multi-planet system [Zn/Fe] of single-planet system is ~solar, higher scatter of [Zn /Fe] of multi- planet system . Sample of M dwarfs within 10 pc there are 246 M stars : RECONS(www.recons.org) Within 25 pc, 67 M dwarf systems are added (Riedel et al., 2010, AJ, 140, 897) H band H band N. Ryde et al H & K Band spectra H band : CO ( v=3), OH, Mg, Al , Si K band : CO(v=2), Na, Ca, Si, Al, Mg, Ti H & K band arXiv:0707.2610v1, Cunha et al. Fine Abundance Analysis Stellar atmospheric parameters : Teff, log g , [Fe/H], xt I. Derive the stellar parameters of M dwarfs using the synthetic spectra in the long wavelength region of the optical spectra (over 8000 Å), which is relatively less contaminated by molecular lines as well as telluric lines. Test the synthetic spectrum for K2 III type star : HD 110014 (강원석 & 이상각, 2011) Kurucz ATLAS9 model grid and SYNTHE code (by Fiorella Castelli) •Wavelength region : 8300 – 8850 Å - Ca I triplet (strong lines) and many Fe/Ti lines •Find the best fit using least-χ2 method - Using [Fe/H] = -1.0 model grids with vtur = 0.0 km/s (no turbulence ) Test the synthetic spectrum for K2 III type star Target : HD 110014 ( observed with BOES at BOAO on 29 Apr 2011 ) : Wavelength : 8300 – 8850 Å Results : Teff = 4556 K, log g = 1.99 dex From fine analysis (Fe I/Fe II lines) :Teff = 4410 K, log g = 2.24 dex (Kang, 2011) Line data 8300 – 8700 A Log g : Wilson –Bappu Relation G, K, M type stars ( I, II, III, IV, V) 박선경, 이정은 , 이상각 & 강원석 2012 a SpT-Te relation not valid for Te<2800K & not valid for >M6. the zTiO/CaH metallicity index The optical and near infrared spectra of M dwarfs and subdwarfs are dominated by molecular absorption bands of metal oxides and hydrides, most prominently bands of TiO and CaH (Bessel 1991). The ratio between the strength of the oxide and hydride bands has long been known as a metallicity diagnostic (Bessel 1982). The current classification system of cool (spectral subtypes K5-M6) and ultracool (subtypesM7-M9) low-mass stars distinguishes three broad metallicity classes: the dwarfs (K5- M9, or dK5-dM9), the metal-poor subdwarfs (sdK5-sdM9), and the very metal-poor extreme subdwarfs (esdK5-esdM9). Lepine et al 2007 Metallicity 4-classes Lepine et al 2007 Synthetic spectra the NextGen model atmosphere grid of Hauschildt, Allard, & Baron (1999). Synthetic spectra for cool stars were retrieved from the website of the PHOENIX project( http://www.hs.unihamburg.de/EN/For/ThA/phoenix) critical metallicity calibration has now been initiated based on atmospheric modeling of Fe lines using high resolution spectra of bright (mostly early-type)M dwarfs and subdwarfs (Woolf & Wallerstein 2005, 2006; Bean et al. 2006). Teff, [Fe/H] Ratio : Ca II 8498, 8542 & 8622 / KI 7699 Conclusion Spectroscopic abundance analysis in the H & K band ( IGRINS) is reliable for determining the metallicity for M dwarfs and for individual elements abundance determinations. Elemental abundance study for a large sample of M dwarfs covering lower as well as higher metallicities, will provide important clues to the chemical evolution of the Galaxy. 감사합니다. 이상각