Astron. Astrophys. 335, 1009-1017 (1998)
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Abundance analysis of the Bootis stars HD 192640, HD 183324 and HD 84123
*
U. Heiter,
F. Kupka,
E. Paunzen,
W.W. Weiss and
M. Gelbmann
Institute for Astronomy, University of Vienna,
Türkenschanzstrasse 17, A-1180 Vienna, Austria
(last_name@astro.univie.ac.at)
Received 26 November 1997 / Accepted 22 April 1998
Abstract
The classification of Bootis stars based on
photometric indices or low resolution spectra is not sufficient for a
final decision concerning a membership to this group. A detailed
spectroscopic investigation is necessary to rule out stars with
similar classification spectra but different abundance patterns.
Therefore a program on abundance analyses of
Bootis candidates was established, which makes
use of a software package that enables the analysis of high
signal-to-noise spectra with large resolution.
In this paper we present the results of the application of these
tools on two Bootis stars (HD 192640 and
HD 183324), for which the derived abundances agree very well with the
literature. For a third star (HD 84123), which shows a very low
projected rotational velocity, the newly determined abundance pattern
confirms its membership to the Bootis group.
We also investigated the effect of using several different codes
for the calculation of the model atmospheres on the synthetic spectra
of the program stars, which span a wide range in effective
temperature, gravity and metallicity. The substitution of opacity
distribution functions, which where pretabulated for metal abundances
scaled according to the solar composition, by ones calculated for the
individual abundance patterns does not change the synthetic spectra
significantly. On the other hand, the derived abundances are sensitive
to the treatment of overshooting within the calculation of the
convective flux for cool stars.
Key words: convection
stars:
abundances
stars: chemically
peculiar
stars: individual: HD 183324, HD 192640, HD 84123
* Based on observations obtained at the Observatoire de Haute Provence, the Osservatorio Astronomico di Padua-Asiago and with the Hipparcos satellite
Send offprint requests to: U. Heiterbr>
Correspondence to: U. HeiterBR>
© European Southern Observatory (ESO) 1998
Online publication: June 26, 1998
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