s-Processing in AGB Stars Revisited. I. Does the Main Component Constrain the Neutron Source in the 13C-Pocket?
Abstract
Slow neutron captures at A 85 are mainly guaranteed by the reaction 13C(α,n)16O in AGB stars, requiring proton injections from the envelope. These were so far assumed to involve a small mass ( 10-3 M), but models with rotation suggest that in such tiny layers excessive 14N hampers s-processing. Furthermore, s-element abundances in Galaxies require 13C-rich layers substantially extended in mass ( 4 × 10-3 M). We therefore present new calculations aiming at clarifying those issues and at understanding if the solar composition helps to constrain the 13C "pocket" extension. We show: i) that mixing "from bottom to top" (like in magnetic buoyancy or other forced mechanisms) can form a 13C reservoir substantially larger than assumed so far, covering most of the He-rich layers; ii) that stellar models at a fixed metallicity, based on this idea reproduce the main s-component as accurately as before; iii) that they make nuclear contributions from unknown nucleosynthesis processes (LEPP) unnecessary, against common assumptions. These models also avoid problems of mixing at the envelope border and fulfil requirements from C-star luminosities. They yield a large production of nuclei below A = 100, so that 86,87Sr may be fully synthesized by AGB stars, while 88Sr, 89Y and 94Zr are contributed more efficiently than before. We finally suggest tests suitable to say a final word on the extension of the 13C pocket.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.