R-process enrichment from a single event in an ancient dwarf galaxy
Alexander P. Ji, Anna Frebel, Anirudh Chiti, Joshua D. Simon

TL;DR
This study shows that a single rare event, likely a neutron star merger, enriched the ultra-faint dwarf galaxy Reticulum II with heavy r-process elements, confirming the site of such nucleosynthesis in the early universe.
Contribution
It provides strong evidence that a single neutron star merger can produce the observed r-process enrichment in an ancient dwarf galaxy, clarifying the origin of heavy elements.
Findings
Seven of nine stars show strong r-process element enhancement.
Abundance pattern matches the universal r-process pattern.
Enrichment level is 2-3 orders of magnitude higher than in other dwarf galaxies.
Abstract
Elements heavier than zinc are synthesized through the (r)apid and (s)low neutron-capture processes. The main site of production of the r-process elements (such as europium) has been debated for nearly 60 years. Initial studies of chemical abundance trends in old Milky Way halo stars suggested continual r-process production, in sites like core-collapse supernovae. But evidence from the local Universe favors r-process production mainly during rare events, such as neutron star mergers. The appearance of a europium abundance plateau in some dwarf spheroidal galaxies has been suggested as evidence for rare r-process enrichment in the early Universe, but only under the assumption of no gas accretion into the dwarf galaxies. Cosmologically motivated gas accretion favors continual r-process enrichment in these systems. Furthermore, the universal r-process pattern has not been cleanly…
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