Bibcode
González Hernández, J. I.; Rebolo, R.; Israelian, G.
Bibliographical reference
Astronomy and Astrophysics, Volume 478, Issue 1, January IV 2008, pp.203-217
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1
2008
Journal
Citations
32
Refereed citations
28
Description
Context: The chemical analysis of secondary stars of low mass X-ray
binaries provides an opportunity to study the formation processes of
compact objects, either black holes or neutron stars. Aims:
Following the discovery of overabundances of α-elements in the
Keck I/HIRES spectrum of the secondary star of Nova Scorpii 1994
(Israelian et al. 1999, Nature, 401, 142), we obtained VLT/UVES
high-resolution spectroscopy with the aim of performing a detailed
abundance analysis of this secondary star. Methods: Using a
χ2-minimization procedure and a grid of synthetic spectra, we derive
the stellar parameters and atmospheric abundances of O, Mg, Al, Ca, Ti,
Fe and Ni, using a new UVES spectrum and the HIRES spectrum. Results: The abundances of Al, Ca, Ti, Fe and Ni seem to be consistent
with solar values, whereas Na, and especially O, Mg, Si and S are
significantly enhanced in comparison with Galactic trends of these
elements. A comparison with spherically and non-spherically symmetric
supernova explosion models may provide stringent constraints to the
model parameters as mass-cut and the explosion energy, in particular
from the relative abundances of Si, S, Ca, Ti, Fe and Ni. Conclusions: Most probably the black hole in this system formed in a
hypernova explosion of a 30-35 {M}_&sun; progenitor star with a mass-cut
in the range 2-3.5 {M}_&sun;. However, these models produce abundances
of Al and Na almost ten times higher than the observed values.
Based
on observations obtained with UVES at VLT Kueyen 8.2 m telescope in
programme 073.D-0473(A).
Related projects
Observational Tests of the Processes of Nucleosynthesis in the Universe
Several spectroscopic analyses of stars with planets have recently been carried out. One of the most remarkable results is that planet-harbouring stars are on average more metal-rich than solar-type disc stars. Two main explanations have been suggested to link this metallicity excess with the presence of planets. The first of these, the “self
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