Titanium abundances in late-type stars I. 1D non-local thermodynamic equilibrium modelling in benchmark dwarfs and giants
Abstract
The titanium abundances of late-type stars are important tracers of Galactic formation history. However, abundances inferred from Ti I and Ti II lines can be in stark disagreement in very metal-poor giants. Departures from local thermodynamic equilibrium (LTE) have a large impact on the minority neutral species and thus influences the ionisation imbalance, but satisfactory non-LTE modelling for both dwarfs and giants has not been achieved in previous literature. The reliability of titanium abundances is reassessed in benchmark dwarfs and giants using a new non-LTE model and one-dimensional (1D) model atmospheres. A comprehensive model atom was compiled with a more extended level structure and newly published data for inelastic collisions between Ti I and neutral hydrogen. In 1D LTE, the Ti I and Ti II lines agree to within 0.06 dex for the Sun, Arcturus, and the very metal-poor stars HD84937 and HD140283. For the very metal-poor giant HD122563, the Ti I lines give an abundance that is 0.47 dex lower than that from Ti II. The 1D non-LTE corrections can reach +0.4 dex for individual Ti I lines and +0.1 dex for individual Ti II lines, and reduce the overall ionisation imbalance to -0.17 dex for HD122563. However, it also increases the imbalance for the very metal-poor dwarf and sub-giant to around 0.2 dex. Using 1D non-LTE reduces the ionisation imbalance in very metal-poor giants but breaks the balance of other very metal-poor stars, consistent with the conclusions in earlier literature. To make further progress, consistent 3D non-LTE models are needed.
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