11-13 September 2023
CSEC, James Clerk Maxwell Building, Edinburgh (UK)
Europe/London timezone

Exploring the Origin of Light Heavy Elements: bridging experiments, theory, and observations

11 Sep 2023, 14:05
45m
CSEC Board Room (CSEC, James Clerk Maxwell Building, Edinburgh (UK))

CSEC Board Room

CSEC, James Clerk Maxwell Building, Edinburgh (UK)

Kings Buildings Campus, Peter Guthrie Tait Road, Edinburgh EH9 3FD

Speaker

Thanassis Psaltis (TUNL/NCSU)

Description

The light heavy elements between strontium and silver, can be synthesized in a primary process in either neutron- (weak r-process) or proton-rich (νp-process) neutrino-driven outflows of explosive environments [1]. Constraining the nuclear physics uncertainties, for example the (α,xn) reaction rates in the weak r-process [2,3], allows us to investigate the conditions that create the light heavy elements, by comparing to the abundances of Galactic metal-poor stars. In addition, the study of presolar stardust grains (SiC) can also reveal signatures of neutrino-driven nucleosynthesis in the Galaxy [4]. We have used an extensive library of astrophysical conditions of both neutron- and proton-rich neutrino-driven outflows, as well as combinations of the two to reproduce the abundance patterns observed in metal poor stars with enhanced light neutron-capture element production, such as HD 122563 (Honda star)[5]. Our preliminary results suggest that there are specific combinations of astrophysical conditions that can reproduce the light heavy elemental abundances observed in such stars.

*This work was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation)—Project No. 279384907—SFB 1245, the European Research Council Grant No. 677912 EUROPIUM, and the State of Hesse within the Research Cluster ELEMENTS (Project ID 500/10.006)

References
[1] A. Arcones and F. Montes, Astrophys. J. 731, 5 (2011)
[2] J. Bliss et al., Phys. Rev. C 101, 055807 (2020)
[3] A. Psaltis et al., Astrophys. J. 935, 27 (2022)
[4] A. Psaltis et al. (in preparation).
[5] S. Honda et al., Astrophys. J. 666, 1189 (2007)

Primary author

Thanassis Psaltis (TUNL/NCSU)

Co-authors

Almudena Arcones (TU Darmstadt) Melina Avila (Argonne National Laboratory) Fernando Montes (FRIB) Max Jacobi (TU Darmstadt) Peter Mohr (ATOMKI) Camilla Hansen (Goethe University of Frankfurt) Hendrik Schatz (FRIB/MSU) Wei Jia Ong (LLNL)

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