The impact of the revised $^{17}$O$(p,\alpha)^{14}$N reaction rate on $^{17}$O stellar abundances and yields
O. Straniero, C.G.Bruno, M. Aliotta, A. Best, A. Boeltzig, D., Bemmerer, C. Broggini, A. Caciolli, F. Cavanna, G.F. Ciani, P. Corvisiero, S., Cristallo, T. Davinson, R. Depalo, A. Di Leva, Z. Elekes, F. Ferraro, A., Formicola, Zs. F\"ul\"op, G. Gervino, A. Guglielmetti

TL;DR
This study assesses how the updated 17O(p,alpha)14N reaction rate influences stellar surface oxygen isotope ratios and yields, revealing significant impacts on stellar evolution models and interstellar medium enrichment.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of the effects of the revised 17O(p,alpha)14N reaction rate on stellar surface abundances and yields across a range of stellar masses.
Findings
Post-dredge-up 16O/17O ratios increase by about 20%.
17O stellar yields decrease by 15-40%.
Extra-mixing processes have negligible effects on 16O/17O ratios.
Abstract
Context. Material processed by the CNO cycle in stellar interiors is enriched in 17O. When mixing processes from the stellar surface reach these layers, as occurs when stars become red giants and undergo the first dredge up, the abundance of 17O increases. Such an occurrence explains the drop of the 16O/17O observed in RGB stars with mass larger than 1.5 M_\solar. As a consequence, the interstellar medium is continuously polluted by the wind of evolved stars enriched in 17O . Aims. Recently, the Laboratory for Underground Nuclear Astrophysics (LUNA) collaboration released an improved rate of the 17O(p,alpha)14N reaction. In this paper we discuss the impact that the revised rate has on the 16O/17O ratio at the stellar surface and on 17O stellar yields. Methods. We computed stellar models of initial mass between 1 and 20 M_\solar and compared the results obtained by adopting the revised…
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