Learning about the intermediate neutron-capture process from lead abundances
Melanie Hampel, Amanda I. Karakas, Richard J. Stancliffe, Bradley S., Meyer, and Maria Lugaro

TL;DR
This paper investigates the intermediate neutron-capture (i) process in stars, explaining observed heavy-element abundances, especially low lead levels, through single-zone nucleosynthesis models, providing new insights into neutron densities and process timescales.
Contribution
It introduces i-process nucleosynthesis models that explain observed heavy-element patterns in stars, especially low lead abundances, and characterizes the neutron densities and exposures involved.
Findings
i-process models match observed heavy-element patterns in post-AGB stars
Lower-metallicity CEMP-i stars have higher neutron densities and exposures
The i process operates on timescales of a few years or less
Abstract
Lead (Pb) is predominantly produced by the slow neutron-capture process (s process) in asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars. In contrast to significantly enhanced Pb abundances predicted by low-mass, low-metallicity AGB-models, observations of Magellanic post-AGB stars show incompatibly low Pb abundances. Observations of carbon-enhanced metal-poor (CEMP) stars whose s-process enrichments are accompanied by heavy elements traditionally associated with the rapid neutron-capture process (r process) have raised the need for a neutron-capture process operating at neutron densities intermediate to the s and r process: the so-called i process. We study i-process nucleosynthesis with single-zone nuclear-network calculations. Our i-process models can explain the heavy-element abundance patterns measured in Magellanic post-AGB stars including their puzzlingly low Pb abundances. Furthermore, the…
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