Constraining the astrophysical origin of the p-nuclei through nuclear physics and meteoritic data
T. Rauscher, N. Dauphas, I. Dillmann, C. Fr\"ohlich, Zs. F\"ul\"op,, Gy. Gy\"urky

TL;DR
This paper reviews the astrophysical origins of p-nuclei, emphasizing the gamma-process in massive stars, and explores how nuclear physics and meteoritic data can constrain models and reduce uncertainties in nucleosynthesis predictions.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive review of current models, nuclear inputs, and observational constraints, highlighting methods to better constrain p-nuclei production mechanisms.
Findings
Gamma-process in massive stars produces many p-nuclei but has deficiencies.
Meteoritic data help constrain nucleosynthesis models.
Nuclear uncertainties significantly affect reaction rate predictions.
Abstract
A small number of naturally occurring, proton-rich nuclides (the p-nuclei) cannot be made in the s- and r-process. Their origin is not well understood. Massive stars can produce p-nuclei through photodisintegration of pre-existing intermediate and heavy nuclei. This so-called gamma-process requires high stellar plasma temperatures and occurs mainly in explosive O/Ne burning during a core-collapse supernova. Although the gamma-process in massive stars has been successful in producing a large range of p-nuclei, significant deficiences remain. An increasing number of processes and sites has been studied in recent years in search of viable alternatives replacing or supplementing the massive star models. A large number of unstable nuclei, however, with only theoretically predicted reaction rates are included in the reaction network and thus the nuclear input may also bear considerable…
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