Nucleosynthesis in dynamical and torus ejecta of compact binary mergers
Oliver Just (1,2), Andreas Bauswein (3), Ricard Ardevol Pulpillo, (1,4), Stephane Goriely (5), H.-Thomas Janka (1) ((1) MPI Astrophysics,, Garching, (2) MPPC, (3) Univ. Thessaloniki, (4) Physik Dept., TUM, Garching,, (5) ULB Brussels)

TL;DR
This study models nucleosynthesis in ejecta from compact binary mergers and their black hole-torus systems, revealing how different ejecta contribute to heavy element formation and match solar abundance patterns.
Contribution
It provides a detailed simulation of BH-torus evolution and nucleosynthesis, highlighting the impact of viscous and neutrino-driven outflows on element production, which was not comprehensively studied before.
Findings
Torus ejecta produce a wide range of heavy elements from A~80 to actinides.
Combined ejecta can reproduce solar abundance patterns for A>90.
Variations in ejecta contributions may explain observed elemental abundance differences.
Abstract
We present a comprehensive study of r-process element nucleosynthesis in the ejecta of compact binary mergers (CBMs) and their relic black-hole (BH)-torus systems. The evolution of the BH-accretion tori is simulated for seconds with a Newtonian hydrodynamics code including viscosity effects, pseudo-Newtonian gravity for rotating BHs, and an energy-dependent two-moment closure scheme for the transport of electron neutrinos and antineutrinos. The investigated cases are guided by relativistic double neutron star (NS-NS) and NS-BH merger models, producing ~3-6 Msun BHs with rotation parameters of A~0.8 and tori of 0.03-0.3 Msun. Our nucleosynthesis analysis includes the dynamical (prompt) ejecta expelled during the CBM phase and the neutrino and viscously driven outflows of the relic BH-torus systems. While typically ~20-25% of the initial accretion-torus mass are lost by viscously driven…
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