A Constraint on Z from Fits of Isochrones to the Color-Magnitude Diagram of M67
Abstract
The mass at which a transition is made between stars that have radiative or convective cores throughout the core H-burning phase is a fairly sensitive function of Z (particularly the CNO abundances). As a consequence, the ~4 Gyr, open cluster M67 provides a constraint on Z (and the solar heavy-element mixture) because (i) high-resolution spectroscopy indicates that this system has virtually the same metal abundances as the Sun, and (ii) its turnoff stars have masses just above the lower limit for sustained core convection on the main sequence. In this study, evolutionary tracks and isochrones using the latest MARCS model atmospheres as boundary conditions have been computed for 0.6-1.4 solar masses on the assumption of a metals mix (implying Z = 0.0125) based on the solar abundances derived by M. Asplund and collaborators using 3-D model atmospheres. These calculations do not predict a turnoff gap where one is observed in M67. No such difficulty is found if the analysis uses isochrones for Z = 0.0165, assuming the Grevesse & Sauval (1998) mix of heavy elements. Our findings, like the inferences from helioseismology, indicate a problem with the Asplund et al. abundances. However, it is possible that low-Z models with diffusive processes taken into account will be less problematic.
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