TL;DR: In this paper, a detailed abundance determination in a sample of early-type stars with and without planets via spectral synthesis was performed, and the chemical pattern of the stars in their sample (13 stars with planets and 24 stars without detected planets) with those of lambda Bootis and other chemically peculiar stars.
Abstract: Aims. To explore the chemical pattern of early-type stars with planets, searching for a possible signature of planet formation. In particular, we study a likely relation between the lambda Bootis chemical pattern and the presence of giant planets. Methods. We performed a detailed abundance determination in a sample of early-type stars with and without planets via spectral synthesis. Results. We compared the chemical pattern of the stars in our sample (13 stars with planets and 24 stars without detected planets) with those of lambda Bootis and other chemically peculiar stars. We have found four lambda Bootis stars in our sample, two of which present planets and circumstellar disks (HR 8799 and HD 169142) and one without planets detected (HD 110058). We have also identified the first lambda Bootis star orbited by a brown dwarf (zeta Del). This interesting pair lambda Bootis star + brown dwarf could help to test stellar formation scenarios. We found no unique chemical pattern for the group of early-type stars bearing giant planets. However, our results support, in principle, a suggested scenario in which giant planets orbiting pre-main-sequence stars possibly block the dust of the disk and result in a lambda Bootis-like pattern. On the other hand, we do not find a lambda Bootis pattern in different hot-Jupiter planet host stars, which do not support the idea of possible accretion from the winds of hot-Jupiters, recently proposed in the literature. Then, other mechanisms should account for the presence of the lambda Bootis pattern between main-sequence stars. Finally, we suggest that the formation of planets around lambda Bootis stars such as HR 8799 and HD 169142 is also possible through the core accretion process and not only gravitational instability [abridged]
TL;DR: In this article, it is suggested that β Pic may be an unrecognized λ Boo star, based on the recent discussion of its evolutionary status by Paresce (1991, A&A, 247) and the proposal by Venn & Lambert (1990, ApJ, 363) linking circumstellar material with the λBoo phenomenon.
Abstract: It is suggested that β Pic may be an unrecognized λ Boo star, based on the recent discussion of its evolutionary status by Paresce (1991, A&A, 247) and the proposal by Venn & Lambert (1990, ApJ, 363) linking circumstellar material with the λ Boo phenomenon. The star's metallicity, photometric indices and UV spectrum support this interpretation. If confirmed as a λ Boo star, β Pic would lend support to the accretion hypothesis of Venn & Lambert and would be the first λ Boo object recognized a priori from surrounding circumstellar material. In light of this classification, other workers' results suggesting that β Pic would be undergoing possible enrichment in metals from infalling, comet-like bodies, are discussed
TL;DR: In this article, a low mass-accretion rate of gas and dust from a circumstellar or circum-system disc onto A-F type stars in very different evolutionary phases can lead to the selective accretion of only the gas due to the differential forces that act on the gas and the dust.
Abstract: It is proposed that a low mass-accretion rate of gas and dust from a circumstellar or circum-system disc onto A-F type stars in very different evolutionary phases can lead to the selective accretion of only the gas due to the differential forces that act on the gas and the dust. This may result in a photosphere with a depletion pattern similar to that of the Interstellar Medium. Such a mechanism can explain the abundance patterns in λ Boo stars and in some post-AGB stars that are in wide binary systems. Accretion of clean gas from a circum-system disc in post-AGB binaries requires much less strict conditions on the binary evolution than the binary scenario proposed by Mathis & Lamers (1992, A&A, 259) does
TL;DR: In this paper, CCD observations of diagnostic features in the optical spectra of eight southern λ Boo stars and one normal A star are presented, and the general weakness of Mg II 4481 A is confirmed, yet a wide range in strength and magnesium abundance exists.
Abstract: CCD observations of diagnostic features in the optical spectra of eight southern λ Boo stars and one normal A star are presented. The general weakness of Mg II 4481 A is confirmed, yet a wide range in strength and magnesium abundance exists. Narrow interstellar or circumstellar absorption components of Na I 5890+5896 A are detected in three stars; in HR 4881 they exceed in strength those of the shell star β Pictoris and are probably of circumstellar origin. HR 4881 also exhibits a conspicuous absorption feature in Ca II 3933 A, resembling β Pic in appearance