SIMBAD references

1996A&A...307..849V - Astronomy and Astrophysics, volume 307, 849-859 (1996/3-3)

The abundance of boron in evolved A- and B-type stars.

VENN K.A., LAMBERT D.L. and LEMKE M.

Abstract (from CDS):

Boron abundances in A- and B-type stars may be a successful way to track evolutionary effects in these hot stars. The light elements - Li, Be, and B - are tracers of exposure to temperatures more moderate than those in which the H-burning CN-cycle operates. Thus, any exposure of surface stellar layers to deeper layers will affect these light element abundances. Li and Be are used in this role in investigations of evolutionary processes in cool stars, but are not observable in hotter stars. An investigation of boron, however, is possible through the BII 1362A resonance line. We have gathered high resolution spectra from the IUE database of A- and B-type stars near 10M for which nitrogen abundances have been determined (by Gies & Lambert and Venn). The BII 1362A line is blended throughout the temperature range of this program, requiring spectrum syntheses to recover the boron abundances. For no star could we synthesize the 1362A region using the meteoritic/solar boron abundance of logε(B)=2.88 (Anders & Grevesse); a lower boron abundance was necessary which may reflect evolutionary effects (e.g., mass loss or mixing near the main-sequence), the natal composition of the star forming regions, or a systematic error in the analyses (e.g., non-LTE effects). Regardless of the initial boron abundance, and despite the possibility of non-LTE effects, it seems clear that boron is severely depleted in some stars. It may be that the nitrogen and boron abundances are anticorrelated, as would be expected from mixing between the H-burning and outer stellar layers. If, as we suspect, a residue of boron is present in the A-type supergiants, we may exclude a scenario in which mixing occurs continuously between the surface and the deep layers operating the CN-cycle. Further exploitation of the BII 1362A line as an indicator of the evolutionary status of A- and B-type stars will require a larger stellar sample to be observed with higher signal-to-noise as attainable with the Hubble Space Telescope.

Abstract Copyright:

Journal keyword(s): stars: abundances - stars: early-type - stars: evolution - supergiants

Simbad objects: 16

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