The End of Nucleosynthesis: Production of Lead and Thorium in the Early Galaxy
Ian U. Roederer (University of Texas), Karl-Ludwig Kratz, (Max-Planck-Institut fur Chemie), Anna Frebel (Harvard-Smithsonian Center for, Astrophysics), Norbert Christlieb (Zentrum fur Astronomie der Universitat, Heidelberg), Bernd Pfeiffer (Max-Planck-Institut fur Chemie)

TL;DR
This study analyzes lead and thorium abundances in metal-poor stars to understand the r-process nucleosynthesis, showing consistent abundance patterns and validating models that reproduce heavy element distributions in the early galaxy.
Contribution
It provides new stellar abundance measurements and confirms that the main r-process can explain heavy element production, including lead and thorium, in early galaxy stars.
Findings
Abundance ratios among heavy elements are consistent with solar system r-process.
The classical waiting-point model successfully reproduces observed heavy element patterns.
Nuclear fission losses are negligible for isotopes between Pb and Th/U.
Abstract
We examine the Pb and Th abundances in 27 metal-poor stars (-3.1 < [Fe/H] < -1.4) whose very heavy metal (Z > 56) enrichment was produced only by the rapid (r-) nucleosynthesis process. New abundances are derived from HST/STIS, Keck/HIRES, and VLT/UVES spectra and combined with other measurements from the literature to form a more complete picture of nucleosynthesis of the heaviest elements produced in the r-process. In all cases, the abundance ratios among the rare earth elements and the 3rd r-process peak elements considered (La, Eu, Er, Hf, and Ir) are constant and equivalent to the scaled solar system r-process abundance distribution. We compare the stellar observations with r-process calculations within the classical "waiting-point" approximation. In these computations a superposition of 15 weighted neutron-density components in the range 23 < log(n_n) < 30 is fit to the r-process…
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