Abstract
The origin of the heaviest elements is still a matter of debate. For the rapid neutron capture process (“r-process”), multiple sites have been proposed, e.g., neutron star mergers and (sub-classes) of supernovae (e.g., [1,2,3,4]). R-process elements have been measured in a large fraction of metal-poor stars [5]. Galactic archeology studies show that the r-process abundances among these stars vary by over two orders of magnitude. On the other hand, abundances in stars in the galactic disk do not differ greatly. This leads to two major open questions: (1) What is the reason for such a huge abundance scatter of r-process elements in the early galaxy? (2) While the large scatter at low metallicities might point to a rare production site, why is there barely any scatter at solar-like metallicities? We use the high resolution ((20 pc)\(^3\)/cell) inhomogeneous chemical evolution tool “ICE” to study the role of the contributing source(s) of r-process elements. Our main findings are that in addition to neutron star mergers, a second, early acting site is necessary. We assume “magnetorotationally driven supernovae” as this additional and earlier r-process site and conclude that our simulations with an adequate combination of these two sites successfully reproduce the observed r-process elemental abundances in the Galactic halo. Finally, we discuss the potential role of neutron star-black hole mergers as alternative earlier r-process site.
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Acknowledgements
BW is supported by a mobility fellowship of the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF). The work at NC State (BW, CF) was partially supported by the United States Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Nuclear Physics (award numbers SC0010263 and DE-FG02-02ER41216), and by the Research Corporation for Science Advancement under a Cottrell Scholar Award. BW and FKT were supported by the European Research Council (FP7) under ERC Advanced Grant Agreement No. 321263 - FISH, and the SNF. MP acknowledges the support from the SNF and the “Lendület-2014” Programme of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences (Hungary), of STFC through the University of Hull Consolidated Grant ST/R000840/1, and of ERC Consolidator Grant (Hungary) funding scheme (project RADIOSTAR, G.A. n. 724560). BW, CF, and MP acknowledge support of the National Science Foundation (USA) under grant No. PHY-1430152 (JINA Center for the Evolution of the Elements). This article is based upon work from the “ChETEC” COST Action (CA16117), supported by COST (European Cooperation in Science and Technology).
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Wehmeyer, B., Fröhlich, C., Pignatari, M., Thielemann, FK. (2019). Inhomogeneous Chemical Evolution of r-Process Elements in the Galactic Halo. In: Formicola, A., Junker, M., Gialanella, L., Imbriani, G. (eds) Nuclei in the Cosmos XV. Springer Proceedings in Physics, vol 219. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-13876-9_15
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