Evidence for r-process delay in very metal-poor stars [GA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2102.03368


The abundances of r-process elements of very metal-poor stars capture the history of the r-process enrichment in the early stage of the Milky Way formation. Currently, various types of astrophysical sites including neutron star mergers, magneto-rotational supernovae, and collapsars, are suggested as the origin of r-process elements. The time delay between the star formation and the production of r-process elements is the key to distinguish these scenarios with the caveat that the diffusion of r-process elements in the interstellar medium also induces the delay in r-process enrichment because r-process events are rare. Here we study the observed Ba abundance data of very metal-poor stars as the tracer of the early enrichment history of r-process elements. We find that the gradual increase of [Ba/Mg] with [Fe/H] requires a significant time delay (100 Myr — 1 Gyr) of r-process events from star formation rather than the diffusion-induced delay. We stress that this conclusion is robust to the assumption regarding s-process contamination in the Ba abundances because the sources with no delay would overproduce Ba at very low metallicities even without the contribution from the s-process. Therefore we conclude that sources with a delay, possibly neutron star mergers, are the origins of r-process elements.

Read this paper on arXiv…

Y. Tarumi, K. Hotokezaka and P. Beniamini
Tue, 9 Feb 21
15/87

Comments: 8 pages, 3 figures, submitted to ApJ letters