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e-Article

M Giants with IGRINS III. Abundance Trends for 21 Elements in the Solar Neighborhood from High-Resolution, Near-Infrared Spectra
Document Type
Working Paper
Source
Subject
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies
Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics
Language
Abstract
In order to investigate the chemical history of the entire MilkyWay, it is imperative to also study the dust-obscured regions, where most of the mass lies. The Galactic Center is an example of such a region of interest, where due to the intervening dust along the line-of-sight, near-infrared spectroscopic investigations are necessary. We demonstrate that M giants observed at high spectral resolution in the H and K bands (1.5-2.4 {\mu}m) can yield useful abundance-ratio trends versus metallicity for 21 elements. These elements can therefore be studied also for heavily dust-obscured regions of the Galaxy, such as the Galactic Center, and will be important for the further investigation of the Galactic chemical evolution in these regions. We have observed near-infrared spectra of 50 M giants in the solar neighbourhood at high SNR and at a high spectral resolution (R = 45, 000) with the IGRINS spectrometer on the GEMINI South telescope. We adopted the fundamental stellar parameters for these stars from Nandakumar et al. (2023a), with Teff ranging from 3400 to 3800 K. With a manual spectral synthesis method, we have derived stellar abundances for 21 elements, namely F, Mg, Si, S, Ca, Na, Al, K, Sc, Ti, V, Cr, Mn, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn, Y, Ce, Nd, and Yb. We demonstrate what elements can be analysed from H- and K-band high-resolution spectra, and we show which spectral lines can be used for abundance analysis, showing them line by line. We discuss the 21 abundance-ratio trends and compared them with those determined from APOGEE and from the optical GILD sample. Especially, we determine the trends of the heavy elements Cu, Zn, Y, Ce, Nd, and Yb. This opens up these nucleosynthetic channels, including both the s- and the r-process, in dust-obscured populations. The [Mn/Fe] versus [Fe/H] trend is shown to be more or less flat at low metallicities, implying that existing NLTE correction are relevant.
Comment: 21 pages, 27 figures, Accepted for publication in A&A