i-Process Contribution of Rapidly Accreting White Dwarfs to the Solar Composition of First-Peak Neutron-Capture Elements
Benoit C\^ot\'e, Pavel Denissenkov, Falk Herwig, Ashley J. Ruiter,, Christian Ritter, Marco Pignatari, Krzysztof Belczynski

TL;DR
This study investigates how rapidly accreting white dwarfs contribute to the solar abundance of first-peak neutron-capture elements, suggesting they could explain a significant part of these elements' solar composition.
Contribution
First quantitative assessment of RAWDs' role in producing first-peak neutron-capture elements in the Galaxy using updated stellar yields and chemical evolution models.
Findings
RAWDs contribute 2-45% to solar first-peak neutron-capture elements.
The contribution could explain the missing Lighter Element Primary Process.
No overproduction of isotopes relative to solar composition.
Abstract
Rapidly accreting white dwarfs (RAWDs) have been proposed as contributors to the chemical evolution of heavy elements in the Galaxy. Here, we test this scenario for the first time and determine the contribution of RAWDs to the solar composition of first-peak neutron-capture elements. We add the metallicity-dependent contribution of RAWDs to the one-zone galactic chemical evolution code OMEGA according to RAWD rates from binary stellar population models combined with metallicity-dependent -process stellar yields calculated following the models of Denissenkov et al. (2017). With this approach we find that the contribution of RAWDs to the evolution of heavy elements in the Galaxy could be responsible for a significant fraction of the solar composition of Kr, Rb, Sr, Y, Zr, Nb, and Mo ranging from to depending on the element, the enrichment history of the Galactic gas, and the…
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