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Light, Alpha, and Fe-peak element abundances in the Galactic bulge

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Light, Alpha, and Fe-peak element abundances in the Galactic bulge. / Johnson, Christian I.; Rich, R. Michael; Kobayashi, Chiaki et al.
In: The Astronomical Journal, Vol. 148, No. 4, 67, 09.09.2014.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Johnson, CI, Rich, RM, Kobayashi, C, Kunder, A & Koch, A 2014, 'Light, Alpha, and Fe-peak element abundances in the Galactic bulge', The Astronomical Journal, vol. 148, no. 4, 67. https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-6256/148/4/67

APA

Johnson, C. I., Rich, R. M., Kobayashi, C., Kunder, A., & Koch, A. (2014). Light, Alpha, and Fe-peak element abundances in the Galactic bulge. The Astronomical Journal, 148(4), Article 67. https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-6256/148/4/67

Vancouver

Johnson CI, Rich RM, Kobayashi C, Kunder A, Koch A. Light, Alpha, and Fe-peak element abundances in the Galactic bulge. The Astronomical Journal. 2014 Sept 9;148(4):67. doi: 10.1088/0004-6256/148/4/67

Author

Johnson, Christian I. ; Rich, R. Michael ; Kobayashi, Chiaki et al. / Light, Alpha, and Fe-peak element abundances in the Galactic bulge. In: The Astronomical Journal. 2014 ; Vol. 148, No. 4.

Bibtex

@article{de8b47bb9cf648d696c9085c173a1464,
title = "Light, Alpha, and Fe-peak element abundances in the Galactic bulge",
abstract = "We present radial velocities and chemical abundances of O, Na, Mg, Al, Si, Ca, Cr, Fe, Co, Ni, and Cu for a sample of 156 red giant branch stars in two Galactic bulge fields centered near (l, b) = (+5.25,–3.02) and (0,–12). The (+5.25,–3.02) field also includes observations of the bulge globular cluster NGC 6553. The results are based on high-resolution (R ~ 20,000), high signal-to-noise ration (S/N gsim 70) FLAMES-GIRAFFE spectra obtained through the European Southern Observatory archive. However, we only selected a subset of the original observations that included spectra with both high S/N and that did not show strong TiO absorption bands. This work extends previous analyses of this data set beyond Fe and the α-elements Mg, Si, Ca, and Ti. While we find reasonable agreement with past work, the data presented here indicate that the bulge may exhibit a different chemical composition than the local thick disk, especially at [Fe/H] gsim –0.5. In particular, the bulge [α/Fe] ratios may remain enhanced to a slightly higher [Fe/H] than the thick disk, and the Fe-peak elements Co, Ni, and Cu appear enhanced compared to the disk. There is also some evidence that the [Na/Fe] (but not [Al/Fe]) trends between the bulge and local disk may be different at low and high metallicity. We also find that the velocity dispersion decreases as a function of increasing [Fe/H] for both fields, and do not detect any significant cold, high-velocity populations. A comparison with chemical enrichment models indicates that a significant fraction of hypernovae may be required to explain the bulge abundance trends, and that initial mass functions that are steep, top-heavy (and do not include strong outflow), or truncated to avoid including contributions from stars >40 M ☉ are ruled out, in particular because of disagreement with the Fe-peak abundance data. For most elements, the NGC 6553 stars exhibit abundance trends nearly identical to comparable metallicity bulge field stars. However, the star-to-star scatter and mean [Na/Fe] ratios appear higher in the cluster, perhaps indicating additional self-enrichment.",
author = "Johnson, {Christian I.} and Rich, {R. Michael} and Chiaki Kobayashi and Andrea Kunder and Andreas Koch",
year = "2014",
month = sep,
day = "9",
doi = "10.1088/0004-6256/148/4/67",
language = "English",
volume = "148",
journal = "The Astronomical Journal",
issn = "0004-6256",
publisher = "IOP Publishing Ltd.",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Light, Alpha, and Fe-peak element abundances in the Galactic bulge

AU - Johnson, Christian I.

AU - Rich, R. Michael

AU - Kobayashi, Chiaki

AU - Kunder, Andrea

AU - Koch, Andreas

PY - 2014/9/9

Y1 - 2014/9/9

N2 - We present radial velocities and chemical abundances of O, Na, Mg, Al, Si, Ca, Cr, Fe, Co, Ni, and Cu for a sample of 156 red giant branch stars in two Galactic bulge fields centered near (l, b) = (+5.25,–3.02) and (0,–12). The (+5.25,–3.02) field also includes observations of the bulge globular cluster NGC 6553. The results are based on high-resolution (R ~ 20,000), high signal-to-noise ration (S/N gsim 70) FLAMES-GIRAFFE spectra obtained through the European Southern Observatory archive. However, we only selected a subset of the original observations that included spectra with both high S/N and that did not show strong TiO absorption bands. This work extends previous analyses of this data set beyond Fe and the α-elements Mg, Si, Ca, and Ti. While we find reasonable agreement with past work, the data presented here indicate that the bulge may exhibit a different chemical composition than the local thick disk, especially at [Fe/H] gsim –0.5. In particular, the bulge [α/Fe] ratios may remain enhanced to a slightly higher [Fe/H] than the thick disk, and the Fe-peak elements Co, Ni, and Cu appear enhanced compared to the disk. There is also some evidence that the [Na/Fe] (but not [Al/Fe]) trends between the bulge and local disk may be different at low and high metallicity. We also find that the velocity dispersion decreases as a function of increasing [Fe/H] for both fields, and do not detect any significant cold, high-velocity populations. A comparison with chemical enrichment models indicates that a significant fraction of hypernovae may be required to explain the bulge abundance trends, and that initial mass functions that are steep, top-heavy (and do not include strong outflow), or truncated to avoid including contributions from stars >40 M ☉ are ruled out, in particular because of disagreement with the Fe-peak abundance data. For most elements, the NGC 6553 stars exhibit abundance trends nearly identical to comparable metallicity bulge field stars. However, the star-to-star scatter and mean [Na/Fe] ratios appear higher in the cluster, perhaps indicating additional self-enrichment.

AB - We present radial velocities and chemical abundances of O, Na, Mg, Al, Si, Ca, Cr, Fe, Co, Ni, and Cu for a sample of 156 red giant branch stars in two Galactic bulge fields centered near (l, b) = (+5.25,–3.02) and (0,–12). The (+5.25,–3.02) field also includes observations of the bulge globular cluster NGC 6553. The results are based on high-resolution (R ~ 20,000), high signal-to-noise ration (S/N gsim 70) FLAMES-GIRAFFE spectra obtained through the European Southern Observatory archive. However, we only selected a subset of the original observations that included spectra with both high S/N and that did not show strong TiO absorption bands. This work extends previous analyses of this data set beyond Fe and the α-elements Mg, Si, Ca, and Ti. While we find reasonable agreement with past work, the data presented here indicate that the bulge may exhibit a different chemical composition than the local thick disk, especially at [Fe/H] gsim –0.5. In particular, the bulge [α/Fe] ratios may remain enhanced to a slightly higher [Fe/H] than the thick disk, and the Fe-peak elements Co, Ni, and Cu appear enhanced compared to the disk. There is also some evidence that the [Na/Fe] (but not [Al/Fe]) trends between the bulge and local disk may be different at low and high metallicity. We also find that the velocity dispersion decreases as a function of increasing [Fe/H] for both fields, and do not detect any significant cold, high-velocity populations. A comparison with chemical enrichment models indicates that a significant fraction of hypernovae may be required to explain the bulge abundance trends, and that initial mass functions that are steep, top-heavy (and do not include strong outflow), or truncated to avoid including contributions from stars >40 M ☉ are ruled out, in particular because of disagreement with the Fe-peak abundance data. For most elements, the NGC 6553 stars exhibit abundance trends nearly identical to comparable metallicity bulge field stars. However, the star-to-star scatter and mean [Na/Fe] ratios appear higher in the cluster, perhaps indicating additional self-enrichment.

U2 - 10.1088/0004-6256/148/4/67

DO - 10.1088/0004-6256/148/4/67

M3 - Journal article

VL - 148

JO - The Astronomical Journal

JF - The Astronomical Journal

SN - 0004-6256

IS - 4

M1 - 67

ER -