Stellar Origins of Extremely $^{\text{13}}C$- and $^{15}N$-enriched Presolar SiC Grains: Novae or Supernovae?
Nan Liu, Larry R. Nittler, Conel M. O'D. Alexander, Jianhua Wang,, Marco Pignatari, Jordi Jose, Ann Nguyen

TL;DR
This study analyzes isotopic compositions of presolar SiC grains to determine whether their origins are more consistent with classical novae or core-collapse supernovae, revealing diverse stellar sources and complex nucleosynthetic signatures.
Contribution
It provides new isotopic data for presolar SiC grains and discusses their origins, challenging previous assumptions by showing evidence for both novae and supernovae contributions.
Findings
Four grains likely originated from CCSNe with explosive H burning signatures.
Some grains show isotopic signatures incompatible with classical nova models, suggesting supernova origins.
AB grains have distinct isotopic signatures indicating weaker proton-capture nucleosynthesis.
Abstract
Extreme excesses of (/<10) and (/<20) in rare presolar SiC grains have been considered diagnostic of an origin in classical novae, though an origin in core collapse supernovae (CCSNe) has also been proposed. We report C, N, and Si isotope data for 14 submicron- to micron-sized - and -enriched presolar SiC grains (/<16 and /<~100) from Murchison, and their correlated Mg-Al, S, and Ca-Ti isotope data when available. These grains are enriched in and , but with quite diverse Si isotopic signatures. Four grains with excesses similar to those of type C SiC grains likely came from CCSNe, which experienced explosive H burning occurred during explosions. The independent coexistence of proton- and neutron-capture isotopic signatures in these grains strongly supports…
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