Short-lived radioactivity in the early Solar System: the Super-AGB star hypothesis
Maria Lugaro, Carolyn L. Doherty, Amanda. I. Karakas, Sarah T., Maddison, Kurt Liffman, D. A. Garc\'ia-Hern\'andez, Lionel Siess, and John C., Lattanzio

TL;DR
This study proposes that Super-AGB stars could have produced short-lived radionuclides found in the early Solar System, matching observed isotope ratios and offering a local stellar origin hypothesis.
Contribution
First detailed modeling of SLR production in 7-11 solar mass Super-AGB stars, linking stellar evolution to Solar System radionuclide abundances.
Findings
Super-AGB models produce 26Al/27Al ratios consistent with Solar System values.
Models match meteoritic abundances of 41Ca and 60Fe.
Predicted SLR yields depend on nuclear physics and stellar parameters.
Abstract
The composition of the most primitive Solar System condensates, such as calcium-aluminum-rich inclusions (CAI) and micron-sized corundum grains, show that short-lived radionuclides (SLR), e.g., 26Al, were present in the early Solar System. Their abundances require a local origin, which however is far from being understood. We present for the first time the abundances of several SLR up to 60Fe predicted from stars with initial mass in the range roughly 7-11 Msun. These stars evolve through core H, He, and C burning. After core C burning they go through a "Super"-asymptotic giant branch (Super-AGB) phase, with the H and He shells activated alternately, episodic thermal pulses in the He shell, a very hot temperature at the base of the convective envelope (~ 10^8 K), and strong stellar winds driving the H-rich envelope into the surrounding interstellar medium. The final remnants of the…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
