The Ubiquity of the Rapid Neutron-Capture Process
I.U. Roederer, J.J. Cowan, A.I. Karakas, K.-L. Kratz, M. Lugaro, J., Simmerer, K. Farouqi, and C. Sneden

TL;DR
This study analyzes heavy element abundances in metal-poor stars to understand the r-process nucleosynthesis, revealing that the r-process is common and that s-process material dispersal occurs at higher metallicities.
Contribution
It provides new abundance measurements and insights into the timing and variability of r-process and s-process contributions in the early galaxy.
Findings
No significant increase in Pb/Eu ratios with metallicity in s-process-free stars.
At least 0.5 dex dispersion in [La/Eu] suggests variable r-process yields.
Heavy elements are common in metal-poor stars, indicating widespread r-process occurrence.
Abstract
To better characterize the abundance patterns produced by the r-process, we have derived new abundances or upper limits for the heavy elements zinc (Zn), yttrium (Y), lanthanum (La), europium (Eu), and lead (Pb). Our sample of 161 metal-poor stars includes new measurements from 88 high resolution and high signal-to-noise spectra obtained with the Tull Spectrograph on the 2.7m Smith Telescope at McDonald Observatory, and other abundances are adopted from the literature. We use models of the s-process in AGB stars to characterize the high Pb/Eu ratios produced in the s-process at low metallicity, and our new observations then allow us to identify a sample of stars with no detectable s-process material. In these stars, we find no significant increase in the Pb/Eu ratios with increasing metallicity. This suggests that s-process material was not widely dispersed until the overall Galactic…
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