On the Origin of the Early Solar System Radioactivities. Problems with the AGB and Massive Star Scenarios
D. Vescovi, M. Busso, S. Palmerini, O. Trippella, S. Cristallo, L., Piersanti, A. Chieffi, M. Limongi, P. Hoppe, K.-L. Kratz

TL;DR
This paper critically examines the origins of extinct radioactivities in the early solar system, highlighting difficulties in explaining certain isotopes through AGB and massive star scenarios, and suggesting the need for alternative explanations.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive re-evaluation of stellar nucleosynthesis models, identifying specific challenges in accounting for observed radioisotope ratios in the solar nebula.
Findings
Galactic inheritance explains most radioactivities.
AGB and massive star models struggle to reproduce certain isotope ratios.
Inhomogeneous supernova contamination introduces additional problems.
Abstract
Recent improvements in stellar models for intermediate-mass and massive stars are recalled, together with their expectations for the synthesis of radioactive nuclei of lifetime Myr, in order to re-examine the origins of now extinct radioactivities, which were alive in the solar nebula. The Galactic inheritance broadly explains most of them, especially if -process nuclei are produced by neutron star merging according to recent models. Instead, Al, Ca, Cs and possibly Fe require nucleosynthesis events close to the solar formation. We outline the persisting difficulties to account for these nuclei by Intermediate Mass Stars (2 M/M). Models of their final stages now predict the ubiquitous formation of a C reservoir as a neutron capture source; hence, even in presence of Al production from…
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