4.7 Article

ABUNDANCES OF Sr, Y, AND Zr IN METAL-POOR STARS AND IMPLICATIONS FOR CHEMICAL EVOLUTION IN THE EARLY GALAXY

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 687, Issue 1, Pages 272-286

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/591545

Keywords

nuclear reactions; nucleosynthesis; abundances; stars: abundances; stars: Population II; supernovae: general

Funding

  1. DOE [DE-FG02-87ER40328, DE-FG0388ER13851]
  2. J. Nuth at the Goddard Space Flight Center

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We have attributed the elements from Sr through Ag in stars of low metallicities ([Fe/H] less than or similar to -1.5) to charged-particle reactions (CPRs) in neutrino-driven winds, which are associated with neutron star formation in low-mass and normal supernovae (SNe) from progenitors of similar to 8-11 M-circle dot and similar to 12-25 M-circle dot, respectively. Using this rule and attributing all Fe production to normal SNe, we previously developed a phenomenological two-component model, which predicts that [Sr/Fe] >= -0.32 for all metal-poor stars. This is in direct conflict with the high-resolution data now available, which show that there is a great shortfall of Sr relative to Fe in many stars with [Fe/H] less than or similar to 3. The same conflict also exists for the CPR elements Y and Zr. We show that the data require a stellar source leaving behind black holes and that hypernovae (HNe) from progenitors of similar to 25-50 M-circle dot are the most plausible candidates. If we expand our previous model to include three components (low-mass and normal SNe and HNe), we find that essentially all of the data are very well described by the new model. The HN yield pattern for the low-A elements from Na through Zn ( including Fe) is inferred from the stars deficient in Sr, Y, and Zr. We estimate that HNe contributed similar to 24% of the bulk solar Fe inventory while normal SNe contributed only similar to 9% ( not the usually assumed similar to 33%). This implies a greatly reduced role of normal SNe in the chemical evolution of the low-A elements.

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