A Stringent Limit on the Mass Production Rate of r-Process Elements in the Milky Way
Abstract
We analyze data from several studies of metal-poor stars in the Milky Way, focusing on both strong (Eu) and weak (Sr) r-process elements. Because these elements were injected in an explosion, we calculate the mass swept up when the blast wave first becomes radiative, yielding a lower limit for the dilution of such elements and hence a lower limit on the ejecta mass which is incorporated into the next generation of stars. Our study demonstrates that in order to explain the largest enhancements in [Eu/Fe] observed in stars at low [Fe/H] metallicities, individual r-process production events must synthesize a minimum of 10-3.5 M of r-process material. We also show that if the site of Mg production is the same as that of Eu, individual injection events must synthesize up to 10-3 M of r-process material. On the other hand, demanding that Sr traces Mg production results in r-process masses per event of 10-5 M. This suggests that the astrophysical sites responsible for the genesis of the strong r-process elements need to operate at a drastically reduced rate when compared to core-collapse supernovae, while the synthesis of the weak r-process material is consistent with a supernova production site.
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.