Chemical evolution with rotating massive star yields: I. The solar neighbourhood and the s-process elements
N. Prantzos, C. Abia, M. Limongi, A. Chieffi, S. Cristallo

TL;DR
This study models the chemical evolution of the Milky Way, incorporating new stellar yields that include rotation effects, successfully reproducing observed isotopic abundances and challenging the necessity of the LEPP process.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive chemical evolution model with metallicity-dependent yields from rotating massive stars, improving agreement with observed isotopic ratios and s-process element abundances.
Findings
Reproduces solar isotopic composition within a factor of two for isotopes up to Fe-peak.
Achieves 10% accuracy for most pure s-isotopes, including light and heavy ones.
Shows rotating massive stars explain the [hs/ls] ratio in thin disk stars.
Abstract
We present a comprehensive study of the abundance evolution of the elements from H to U in the Milky Way halo and local disk. We use a consistent chemical evolution model, metallicity dependent isotopic yields from low and intermediate mass stars and yields from massive stars which include, for the first time, the combined effect of metallicity, mass loss and rotation for a large grid of stellar masses and for all stages of stellar evolution. The yields of massive stars are weighted by a metallicity dependent function of the rotational velocities, constrained by observations as to obtain a primary-like N behavior at low metallicity and to avoid overproduction of s-elements at intermediate metallicities. We show that the solar system isotopic composition can be reproduced to better than a factor of two for isotopes up to the Fe-peak, and at the 10\% level for most pure s-isotopes,…
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