Examinando por Autor "Adibekyan V."
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Ítem SWEET-Cat updated: New homogenous spectroscopic parameters(EDP Sciences, 2018-12) Sousa S.G.; Adibekyan V.; Delgado-Mena E.; Santos N.C.; Andreasen D.T.; Ferreira A.C.S.; Tsantaki M.; Barros S.C.C.; Demangeon O.; Israelian G.; Faria J.P.; Figueira P.; Mortier A.; Brandão I.; Montalto M.; Rojas-Ayala B.; Santerne A.Context. Exoplanets have now been proven to be very common. The number of its detections continues to grow following the development of better instruments and missions. One key step for the understanding of these worlds is their characterization, which mostly depend on their host stars. Aims. We perform a significant update of the Stars With ExoplanETs CATalog (SWEET-Cat), a unique compilation of precise stellar parameters for planet-host stars provided for the exoplanet community. Methods. We made use of high-resolution spectra for planet-host stars, either observed by our team or found in several public archives. The new spectroscopic parameters were derived for the spectra following the same homogeneous process (ARES+MOOG). The host star parameters were then merged together with the planet properties listed in exoplanet.eu to perform simple data analysis. Results. We present new spectroscopic homogeneous parameters for 106 planet-host stars. Sixty-three planet hosts are also reviewed with new parameters. We also show that there is a good agreement between stellar parameters derived for the same star but using spectra obtained from different spectrographs. The planet-metallicity correlation is reviewed showing that the metallicity distribution of stars hosting low-mass planets (below 30 M is indistinguishable from that from the solar neighborhood sample in terms of metallicity distribution. © ESO 2018.Ítem The Gaia -ESO survey: The inner disk intermediate-age open cluster NGC 6802(EDP Sciences, 2017-05) Tang B.; Geisler D.; Friel E.; Villanova S.; Smiljanic R.; Casey A.R.; Randich S.; Magrini L.; San Roman I.; Muñoz C.; Cohen R.E.; Mauro F.; Bragaglia A.; Donati P.; Tautvaišiene G.; Drazdauskas A.; Ženoviene R.; Snaith O.; Sousa S.; Adibekyan V.; Costado M.T.; Blanco-Cuaresma S.; Jiménez-Esteban F.; Carraro G.; Zwitter T.; François P.; Jofrè P.; Sordo R.; Gilmore G.; Flaccomio E.; Koposov S.; Korn A.J.; Lanzafame A.C.; Pancino E.; Bayo A.; Damiani F.; Franciosini E.; Hourihane A.; Lardo C.; Lewis J.; Monaco L.; Morbidelli L.; Prisinzano L.; Sacco G.; Worley C.C.; Zaggia S.Milky Way open clusters are very diverse in terms of age, chemical composition, and kinematic properties. Intermediate-age and old open clusters are less common, and it is even harder to find them inside the solar Galactocentric radius, due to the high mortality rate and strong extinction inside this region. NGC 6802 is one of the inner disk open clusters (IOCs) observed by the Gaia-ESO survey (GES). This cluster is an important target for calibrating the abundances derived in the survey due to the kinematic and chemical homogeneity of the members in open clusters. Using the measurements from Gaia-ESO internal data release 4 (iDR4), we identify 95 main-sequence dwarfs as cluster members from the GIRAFFE target list, and eight giants as cluster members from the UVES target list. The dwarf cluster members have a median radial velocity of 13.6 ± 1.9 km s-1, while the giant cluster members have a median radial velocity of 12.0 ± 0.9 km s-1 and a median [Fe/H] of 0.10 ± 0.02 dex. The color-magnitude diagram of these cluster members suggests an age of 0.9 ± 0.1 Gyr, with (m-M)0 = 11.4 and E(B-V) = 0.86. We perform the first detailed chemical abundance analysis of NGC 6802, including 27 elemental species. To gain a more general picture about IOCs, the measurements of NGC 6802 are compared with those of other IOCs previously studied by GES, that is, NGC 4815, Trumpler 20, NGC 6705, and Berkeley 81. NGC 6802 shows similar C, N, Na, and Al abundances as other IOCs. These elements are compared with nucleosynthetic models as a function of cluster turn-off mass. The α, iron-peak, and neutron-capture elements are also explored in a self-consistent way. © ESO, 2017.Ítem The Gaia -ESO Survey: The origin and evolution of s -process elements(EDP Sciences, 2018-09) Magrini L.; Spina L.; Randich S.; Friel E.; Kordopatis G.; Worley C.; Pancino E.; Bragaglia A.; Donati P.; Tautvaišienė G.; Bagdonas V.; Delgado-Mena E.; Adibekyan V.; Sousa S.G.; Jiménez-Esteban F.M.; Sanna N.; Roccatagliata V.; Bonito R.; Sbordone L.; Duffau S.; Gilmore G.; Feltzing S.; Jeffries R.D.; Vallenari A.; Alfaro E.J.; Bensby T.; Francois P.; Koposov S.; Korn A.J.; Recio-Blanco A.; Smiljanic R.; Bayo A.; Carraro G.; Casey A.R.; Costado M.T.; Damiani F.; Franciosini E.; Frasca A.; Hourihane A.; Jofré P.; De Laverny P.; Lewis J.; Masseron T.; Monaco L.; Morbidelli L.; Prisinzano L.; Sacco G.; Zaggia S.Context. Several works have found an increase of the abundances of the s-process neutron-capture elements in the youngest Galactic stellar populations. These trends provide important constraints on stellar and Galactic evolution and they need to be confirmed with large and statistically significant samples of stars spanning wide age and distance intervals. Aims. We aim to trace the abundance patterns and the time evolution of five s-process elements - two belonging to the first peak, Y and Zr, and three belonging to the second peak, Ba, La, and Ce - using the Gaia-ESO IDR5 results for open clusters and disc stars. Methods. From the UVES spectra of cluster member stars, we determined the average composition of clusters with ages >0.1 Gyr. We derived statistical ages and distances of field stars, and we separated them into thin and thick disc populations. We studied the time-evolution and dependence on metallicity of abundance ratios using open clusters and field stars whose parameters and abundances were derived in a homogeneous way. Results. Using our large and homogeneous sample of open clusters, thin and thick disc stars, spanning an age range larger than 10 Gyr, we confirm an increase towards young ages of s-process abundances in the solar neighbourhood. These trends are well defined for open clusters and stars located nearby the solar position and they may be explained by a late enrichment due to significant contribution to the production of these elements from long-living low-mass stars. At the same time, we find a strong dependence of the s-process abundance ratios on the Galactocentric distance and on the metallicity of the clusters and field stars. Conclusions. Our results, derived from the largest and most homogeneous sample of s-process abundances in the literature, confirm the growth with decreasing stellar ages of the s-process abundances in both field and open cluster stars. At the same time, taking advantage of the abundances of open clusters located in a wide Galactocentric range, these results offer a new perspective on the dependence of the s-process evolution on the metallicity and star formation history, pointing to different behaviours at various Galactocentric distances. © 2018 ESO.Ítem The Gaia-ESO Survey: Evidence of atomic diffusion in M67?(Oxford University Press, 2018-07) Bertelli Motta C.; Pasquali A.; Richer J.; Michaud G.; Salaris M.; Bragaglia A.; Magrini L.; Randich S.; Grebel E.K.; Adibekyan V.; Blanco-Cuaresma S.; Drazdauskas A.; Fu X.; Martell S.; Tautvaišiene G.; Gilmore G.; Alfaro E.J.; Bensby T.; Flaccomio E.; Koposov S.E.; Korn A.J.; Lanzafame A.C.; Smiljanic R.; Bayo A.; Carraro G.; Casey A.R.; Costado M.T.; Damiani F.; Franciosini E.; Heiter U.; Hourihane A.; Jofré P.; Lardo C.; Lewis J.; Monaco L.; Morbidelli L.; Sousa S.G.; Worley C.C.; Zaggia S.; Sacco, G.G.Investigating the chemical homogeneity of stars born from the same molecular cloud at virtually the same time is very important for our understanding of the chemical enrichment of the interstellar medium and with it the chemical evolution of the Galaxy. One major cause of inhomogeneities in the abundances of open clusters is stellar evolution of the cluster members. In this work, we investigate variations in the surface chemical composition of member stars of the old open clusterM67 as a possible consequence of atomic diffusion effects taking place during the main-sequence phase. The abundances used are obtained from high-resolution UVES/FLAMES spectra within the framework of the Gaia-ESO Survey. We find that the surface abundances of stars on the main sequence decrease with increasing mass reaching a minimum at the turn-off. After deepening of the convective envelope in subgiant branch stars, the initial surface abundances are restored.We found themeasured abundances to be consistent with the predictions of stellar evolutionary models for a cluster with the age and metallicity of M67. Our findings indicate that atomic diffusion poses a non-negligible constraint on the achievable precision of chemical tagging methods. © 2018 The Author(s) Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society.