Stellar abundances and presolar grains trace the nucleosynthetic origin of molybdenum and ruthenium
Camilla J. Hansen, Anja C. Andersen, and Norbert Christlieb

TL;DR
This study analyzes molybdenum and ruthenium abundances in 71 metal-poor stars to understand their nucleosynthetic origins, revealing multiple formation processes and linking stellar data with presolar grain isotopic compositions.
Contribution
It provides the first extensive comparison of stellar molybdenum and ruthenium abundances with presolar grain isotopic data across a wide metallicity range.
Findings
Mo and Ru show wide abundance spreads indicating multiple formation processes.
Ruthenium is mainly formed by the weak r-process, similar to silver.
Presolar grain isotopic ratios match stellar abundance patterns at [Fe/H]~-1.5.
Abstract
This work presents a large consistent study of molybdenum (Mo) and ruthenium (Ru) abundances in the Milky Way. These two elements are important nucleosynthetic diagnostics. In our sample of 71 Galactic metal-poor field stars, we detect Ru and/or Mo in 51 of these (59 including upper limits). The sample consists of high-resolution, high signal-to-noise spectra covering both dwarfs and giants from [Fe/H]=-0.63 down to -3.16. Thus we provide information on the behaviour of Mo I and Ru I at higher and lower metallicity than is currently known. We find a wide spread in the Mo and Ru abundances, which is typical of heavy elements. This indicates that several formation processes, in addition to high entropy winds, can be responsible for the formation of Mo and Ru. The formation processes are traced by comparing Mo and Ru to elements (Sr, Zr, Pd, Ag, Ba, and Eu) with known formation processes.…
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