The temperature and chronology of heavy-element synthesis in low-mass stars
Pieter Neyskens, Sophie Van Eck, Alain Jorissen, Stephane Goriely,, Lionel Siess, Bertrand Plez

TL;DR
This study directly measures the temperature of heavy-element synthesis in low-mass stars, confirming the 13C neutron source and estimating the s-process duration to be 1-3 million years, independent of stellar models.
Contribution
It provides the first direct temperature measurement of the s-process in evolved stars, supporting the 13C neutron source hypothesis without relying on stellar evolution models.
Findings
Supports 13C as the dominant neutron source in the s-process.
Estimates the s-process duration to be 1-3 million years.
Provides isotopic evidence for nucleosynthesis conditions in low-mass stars.
Abstract
Roughly half of the heavy elements (atomic mass greater than that of iron) are believed to be synthesized in the late evolutionary stages of stars with masses between 0.8 and 8 solar masses. Deep inside the star, nuclei (mainly iron) capture neutrons and progressively build up (through the slow-neutron-capture process, or s-process) heavier elements that are subsequently brought to the stellar surface by convection. Two neutron sources, activated at distinct temperatures, have been proposed: 13C and 22Ne, each releasing one neutron per alpha-particle (4He) captured. To explain the measured stellar abundances, stellar evolution models invoking the 13C neutron source (which operates at temperatures of about one hundred million kelvin) are favoured. Isotopic ratios in primitive meteorites, however, reflecting nucleosynthesis in the previous generations of stars that contributed material to…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Nuclear physics research studies
