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Open clusters (OC) of 1-3 Gyr age contain intermediate-to-low-mass stars in evolutionary phases of multiple relevance to understanding Li evolution. Stars leaving the main sequence (MS) from the hot side of the Lithium dip (LD) at a fixed age can include a range of mass, varying degrees of core degeneracy, and helium ignition under quiescent or flash conditions. An ongoing survey of a significant sample of stars from the giant branch to below the LD in key open clusters has revealed patterns that supply critical clues to the underlying source of Li variation among stars of differing mass and age. While the LD is well established in OC of this age, stars on the hot side of the LD can exhibit Li ranging from the apparent primordial cluster value to upper limits similar to those found at the LD center, despite occupying the same region of the color-magnitude diagram (CMD). Stars on the first-ascent giant branch show a dramatic decline in measurable Li that correlates strongly with increasing age and reduced turnoff mass. We discuss how these trends can be explained in the context of the existence of the LD itself and the temporal evolution of individual stars.
HYDRA spectra of 287 stars in the field of NGC 2506 from the turnoff through the giant branch are analyzed. With previous data, 22 are identified as probable binaries; 90 more are classified as potential non-members. Spectroscopic analyses of ~60 red
Thermally-Pulsing Asymptotic Giant Branch (TP-AGB) stars are relatively short lived (less than a few Myr), yet their cool effective temperatures, high luminosities, efficient mass-loss and dust production can dramatically effect the chemical enrichme
Low-mass stars play a key role in many different areas of astrophysics. In this article, I provide a brief overview of the evolution of low-mass stars, and discuss some of the uncertainties and problems currently affecting low-mass stellar models. Em
We report the discovery of a trend of increasing barium abundance with decreasing age for a large sample of Galactic open clusters. The observed pattern of [Ba/Fe] vs. age can be reproduced with a Galactic chemical evolution model only assuming a hig
This work presents the first long-term photometric variability survey of the intermediate-age open cluster NGC 559. Time-series V band photometric observations on 40 nights taken over more than three years with three different telescopes are analyzed