Bibcode
DOI
García López, R. J.; Lambert, David L.; Edvardsson, Bengt; Gustafsson, Bengt; Kiselman, Dan; Rebolo, Rafael
Bibliographical reference
Astrophysical Journal v.500, p.241
Advertised on:
6
1998
Citations
67
Refereed citations
49
Description
We have observed the B I 2497 A line to derive the boron abundances of
two very metal-poor stars selected to help in tracing the origin and
evolution of this element in the early Galaxy: BD +23 3130 and HD 84937.
The observations were conducted using the Goddard High Resolution
Spectrograph on board the Hubble Space Telescope. A very detailed
abundance analysis via spectral synthesis has been carried out for these
two stars, as well as for two other metal-poor objects with published
spectra, using both Kurucz and OSMARCS model photospheres, and taking
into account consistently the NLTE effects on the line formation. We
have also re-assessed all published boron abundances of old disk and
halo unevolved stars. Our analysis shows that the combination of high
effective temperature (Teff > 6000 K, for which boron is mainly
ionized) and low metallicity ([Fe/H]<-1) makes it difficult to obtain
accurate estimates of boron abundances from the B I 2497 A line. This is
the case of HD 84937 and three other published objects (including two
stars with [Fe/H] ~ -3), for which only upper limits can be established.
BD +23 3130, with [Fe/H] ~ -2.9 and logN(B)_NLTE=0.05+/-0.30, appears
then as the most metal-poor star for which a firm measurement of the
boron abundance presently exists. The evolution of the boron abundance
with metallicity that emerges from the seven remaining stars with Teff
< 6000 K and [Fe/H]<-1, for which beryllium abundances were
derived using the same stellar parameters, shows a linear increase with
a slope ~ 1. Furthermore, the B/Be ratio found is constant at a value ~
20 for stars in the range -3<[Fe/H]<-1. These results point to
spallation reactions of ambient protons and alpha particles with
energetic particles enriched in CNO as the origin of boron and beryllium
in halo stars.