Relative contributions of the weak, main and fission-recycling r-process
S. Shibagaki, T.Kajino, G. J. Mathews, S. Chiba, S. Nishimura, G., Lorusso

TL;DR
This paper proposes a combined model of the r-process involving weak, main, and fission-recycling environments to better explain the observed heavy element abundance patterns in the universe.
Contribution
It introduces a novel integrated r-process model that accounts for element production via supernovae and neutron star mergers, addressing previous underproduction issues.
Findings
The combined model reproduces the solar and stellar r-process abundance peaks.
Fission recycling in neutron star mergers supplements element production.
Relative contributions align with galactic event rates.
Abstract
There has been a persistent conundrum in attempts to model the nucleosynthesis of heavy elements by rapid neutron capture (the -process). Although the location of the abundance peaks near nuclear mass numbers 130 and 195 identify an environment of rapid neutron capture near closed nuclear shells, the abundances of elements just above and below those peaks are often underproduced by more than an order of magnitude in model calculations. At the same time there is a debate in the literature as to what degree the -process elements are produced in supernovae or the mergers of binary neutron stars. In this paper we propose a novel solution to both problems. We demonstrate that the underproduction of elements above and below the -process peaks characteristic in the main or weak -process events (like magnetohydrodynamic jets or neutrino-driven winds in core-collapse supernovae) can…
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