SPLUS J142445.34-254247.1: An <i>r</i>-process-enhanced, Actinide-boost, Extremely Metal-poor Star Observed with GHOST

Placco, Vinicius M.; Almeida-Fernandes, Felipe; Holmbeck, Erika M.; Roederer, Ian U.; Mardini, Mohammad K.; Hayes, Christian R.; Venn, Kim; Chiboucas, Kristin; Deibert, Emily; Gamen, Roberto; Heo, Jeong-Eun; Jeong, Miji; Kalari, Venu; Martioli, Eder; Xu, Siyi; Diaz, Ruben; Gomez-Jimenez, Manuel; Henderson, David; Prado, Pablo; Quiroz, Carlos; Ruiz-Carmona, Roque; Simpson, Chris; Urrutia, Cristian; Mcconnachie, Alan W.; Pazder, John; Burley, Gregory; Ireland, Michael; Waller, Fletcher; Berg, Trystyn A. M.; Robertson, J. Gordon; Hartman, Zachary; Jones, David O.; Labrie, Kathleen; Perez, Gabriel; Ridgway, Susan; Thomas-Osip, Joanna
2023
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
DOI
10.3847/1538-4357/ad077e
We report on a chemo-dynamical analysis of SPLUS J142445.34-254247.1 (SPLUS J1424-2542), an extremely metal-poor halo star enhanced in elements formed by the rapid neutron-capture process (r-process). This star was first selected as a metal-poor candidate from its narrowband S-PLUS photometry and followed up spectroscopically in medium resolution with Gemini-South/GMOS, which confirmed its low-metallicity status. High-resolution spectroscopy was gathered with GHOST at Gemini-South, allowing for the determination of the chemical abundances for 36 elements, from carbon to thorium. At [Fe/H] = -3.39, SPLUS J1424-2542 is one of the lowest-metallicity stars with measured Th and has the highest log is an element of(Th/Eu) observed to date, making it part of the "actinide-boost" category of r-process-enhanced stars. The analysis presented here suggests that the gas cloud from which SPLUS J1424-2542 formed must have been enriched by at least two progenitor populations. The light-element (Z <= 30) abundance pattern is consistent with the yields from a supernova explosion of metal-free stars with 11.3-13.4 M circle dot, and the heavy-element (Z >= 38) abundance pattern can be reproduced by the yields from a neutron star merger (1.66 M circle dot and 1.27 M circle dot) event. A kinematical analysis also reveals that SPLUS J1424-2542 is a low-mass, old halo star with a likely in situ origin, not associated with any known early merger events in the Milky Way.