4.7 Article

CHARGED-PARTICLE AND NEUTRON-CAPTURE PROCESSES IN THE HIGH-ENTROPY WIND OF CORE-COLLAPSE SUPERNOVAE

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 712, Issue 2, Pages 1359-1377

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/712/2/1359

Keywords

nuclear reactions, nucleosynthesis, abundances; supernovae: general; Sun: abundances

Funding

  1. University of Chicago by the National Science Foundation [PHY 02-16783, PHY 08-22648]
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) [806/13-1]
  3. Helmholtz Gemeinschaft [VH-VI-061]
  4. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)
  5. Argonne National Laboratory [DE-AC0206CH11357]

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The astrophysical site of the r-process is still uncertain, and a full exploration of the systematics of this process in terms of its dependence on nuclear properties from stability to the neutron drip-line within realistic stellar environments has still to be undertaken. Sufficiently high neutron-to-seed ratios can only be obtained either in very neutron-rich low-entropy environments or moderately neutron-rich high-entropy environments, related to neutron star mergers (or jets of neutron star matter) and the high-entropy wind of core-collapse supernova explosions. As chemical evolution models seem to disfavor neutron star mergers, we focus here on high-entropy environments characterized by entropy S, electron abundance Y-e, and expansion velocity V-exp. We investigate the termination point of charged-particle reactions, and we define a maximum entropy S-final for a given V-exp and Y-e, beyond which the seed production of heavy elements fails due to the very small matter density. We then investigate whether an r-process subsequent to the charged-particle freeze-out can in principle be understood on the basis of the classical approach, which assumes a chemical equilibrium between neutron captures and photodisintegrations, possibly followed by a beta-flow equilibrium. In particular, we illustrate how long such a chemical equilibrium approximation holds, how the freeze-out from such conditions affects the abundance pattern, and which role the late capture of neutrons originating from beta-delayed neutron emission can play. Furthermore, we analyze the impact of nuclear properties from different theoretical mass models on the final abundances after these late freeze-out phases and beta-decays back to stability. As only a superposition of astrophysical conditions can provide a good fit to the solar r-abundances, the question remains how such superpositions are attained, resulting in the apparently robust r-process pattern observed in low metallicity stars.

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