Silver and palladium help unveil the nature of a second r-process
Camilla Juul Hansen, Francesca Primas, Henrik Hartman, Karl-Ludwig, Kratz, Shinya Wanajo, Bruno Leibundgut, Khalil Farouqi, Oliver Hallmann,, Norbert Christlieb, and Hampus Nilsson

TL;DR
This study investigates the origins of palladium and silver in stars, providing evidence for a second, distinct r-process responsible for their formation, which differs from the main r-process and other nucleosynthesis processes.
Contribution
It presents the first large-scale homogeneous analysis of Pd and Ag in stars, revealing a second r-process with unique conditions and contributions to heavy element formation.
Findings
Evidence for a second/weak r-process responsible for Pd and Ag
Conditions differ from the main r-process, requiring lower neutron densities and entropies
Pd and Ag formation occurs down to [Fe/H] = -3.3
Abstract
The rapid neutron-capture process, creating about half of the heaviest elements in the Solar System was believed to be unique. Many recent studies have shown that this does not include the formation of lighter elements (in particular 38 < Z < 48). Among those, palladium (Pd) and especially silver (Ag) are expected to be key indicators of a possible second r-process, but until recently they have been studied only in a few stars. Therefore we target Pd and Ag in a large sample of stars and compare these abundances to those of Sr, Y, Zr, Ba and Eu produced by the slow (s-) and rapid (r-) neutron-capture processes. Hereby we investigate the nature of the formation process of Ag and Pd. Through a homogeneous 1D LTE analysis of 71 stars we derive stellar abundances using the spectrum synthesis code MOOG, and MARCS model atmospheres. We calculate abundance ratio trends and compare the derived…
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