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Paper: |
A New Near-IR C2 Linelist for an Improved Chemical Analysis of Hydrogen-deficient, Carbon-rich Giants\unboldmath |
Volume: |
519, Radiative Signatures from the Cosmos |
Page: |
147 |
Authors: |
García-Hernández, D. A.; Masseron, T.; Zamora, O.; Manchado, A.; Rao, N. K.; Reddy, A. B. S.; Lambert, D. L.; Yurchenko, S.; Tennyson, J. |
Abstract: |
Diatomic carbon (C2) is ubiquitous in astronomical environments, from
comets and stars to translucent clouds and the interstellar medium. In
particular, the C2 bands (mainly the Ballik-Ramsay and Phillips transitions) are
an important source of opacity in the near-IR region of carbon stars such as the
hydrogen deficient carbon-rich (HdC) or R Coronae Borealis (RCB) stars. Present
C2 linelists are still not accurate enough (e.g., in wavelength positions) to
model the near-IR spectra of HdC and RCB stars, strongly limiting our ability to
properly model their complex spectra and to extract the elemental (an isotopic,
when possible) abundances of key elements like C, N, O, F, etc. Very recently, a
new near-IR C2 linelist (including both Ballik-Ramsay and Phillips systems,
among others) have been generated by the ExoMol project (Yurchenko et al. 2018;
see www.exomol.com). The synthetic spectrum constructed for the benchmark HdC
star HD 137613, using this new C2 linelist, provides an unprecedented match to
its high-resolution (R∼50,000) observed spectrum. The new C2 linelist is thus
expected to significantly improve the near-IR chemical analysis for HdC and RCB
stars but also for normal carbon stars (e.g., C-rich AGB and dwarf stars) and
even Solar System bodies like comets. |
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