Bibcode
DOI
Israelian, Garik; García López, R. J.; Rebolo, Rafael
Bibliographical reference
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 507, Issue 2, pp. 805-817.
Advertised on:
11
1998
Journal
Citations
231
Refereed citations
175
Description
We have performed a detailed oxygen abundance analysis of 23 metal-poor
(-3.0 < [Fe/H] < -0.3) unevolved halo stars and one giant through
the OH bands in the near UV, using high-resolution echelle spectra.
Oxygen is found to be overabundant with respect to iron in these stars,
with the [O/Fe] ratio increasing from 0.6 to 1 between [Fe/H] = -1.5 and
-3.0. The behavior of the oxygen overabundance with respect to [Fe/H] is
similar to that seen in previous works based on O I IR triplet data.
Contrary to the previously accepted picture, our oxygen abundances,
derived from low-excitation OH lines, agree well with those derived from
high-excitation lines of the triplet. For nine stars in common with
Tomkin et al. we obtain a mean difference of 0.00 +/- 0.11 dex with
respect to the abundances determined from the triplet using the same
stellar parameters and model photospheres. For four stars in our sample
we have found measurements of the [O I] lambda6300 line in the
literature, from which we derive oxygen abundances consistent (average
difference 0.09 dex) with those based on OH lines, showing that the
long-standing controversy between oxygen abundances from forbidden and
permitted lines in metal-poor unevolved stars can be resolved. Our new
oxygen abundances show a smooth extension of the Edvardsson and
coworkers [O/Fe] versus metallicity curve to much lower abundances, with
a slope of -0.31 +/- 0.11 (taking into account the error bars in both
oxygen abundances and metallicities) in the range -3 < [Fe/H] <
-1. The extrapolation of our results to very low metallicities indicates
that the first Type II supernovae in the early Galaxy provided oxygen to
iron ratios of [O/Fe] >~ 1. The oxygen abundances of unevolved stars,
when compared with values in the literature for giants of similar
metallicity, imply that the latter may have suffered a process of oxygen
depletion. As a result, unevolved metal-poor stars shall be considered
better tracers of the early evolution of oxygen in the Galaxy. The
higher [O/Fe] ratios we find in dwarfs has an impact on the age
determination of globular clusters, suggesting that current age
estimates have to be reduced by about 1-2 Gyr.