Neutron star mergers and rare core-collapse supernovae as sources of r-process enrichment in simulated galaxies [GA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1907.01557


We use cosmological, magnetohydrodynamical simulations of Milky Way-mass galaxies from the Auriga project to study their enrichment with rapid neutron capture (r-process) elements. We implement a variety of enrichment models from both binary neutron star mergers and rare core-collapse supernovae. We focus on the abundances of (extremely) metal-poor stars, most of which were formed during the first ~Gyr of the Universe in external galaxies and later accreted onto the main galaxy. We find that the majority of metal-poor stars are r-process enriched in all our enrichment models. Neutron star merger models result in a median r-process abundance ratio which increases with metallicity, whereas the median trend in rare core-collapse supernova models is approximately flat. The scatter in r-process abundance increases for models with longer delay times or lower rates of r-process producing events. Our results are nearly perfectly converged, in part due to the mixing of gas between mesh cells in the simulations. Additionally, different Milky Way-mass galaxies show only small variation in their respective r-process abundance ratios. Current (sparse and potentially biased) observations of metal-poor stars in the Milky Way seem to prefer rare core-collapse supernovae over neutron star mergers as the dominant source of r-process elements. Dwarf galaxies which experience a single r-process event early in their history can show highly enhanced r-process abundances at low metallicity, which is seen both in observations and in our simulations. We discuss possible caveats to our models.

Read this paper on arXiv…

F. Voort, R. Pakmor, R. Grand, et. al.
Thu, 4 Jul 19
46/46

Comments: Submitted to MNRAS. Comments welcome