Steady-state nucleosynthesis throughout the Galaxy
Roland Diehl, Martin G.H. Krause, Karsten Kretschmer, Michael Lang,, Moritz M.M. Pleintinger, Thomas Siegert, Wei Wang, Laurent Bouchet, and, Pierrick Martin

TL;DR
This paper discusses gamma-ray observations of nucleosynthesis in the Galaxy, revealing the distribution, dynamics, and sources of isotopes like 26Al and 60Fe, and exploring implications for galactic chemical evolution.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the spatial distribution, kinematics, and origins of nucleosynthesis ejecta using INTEGRAL data, including evidence for superbubble decay regions and constraints on isotope ratios.
Findings
26Al emission is clumpy and extends along the Galactic plane.
Doppler broadening indicates large-scale galactic rotation and superbubble decay.
The 60Fe/26Al ratio is constrained to 0.2-0.4.
Abstract
Measurement and astrophysical interpretation of characteristic gamma-ray lines from nucleosynthesis was one of the prominent science goals of the INTEGRAL mission and in particular its spectrometer SPI. Emission from 26Al and from 60Fe decay lines originates from accumulated ejecta of nucleosynthesis sources, and appears diffuse in nature. 26Al and 60Fe are believed to originate mostly from massive star clusters. Gamma-ray observations open an interesting window to trace the fate and flow of nucleosynthesis ejecta, after they have left the immediate sources and their birth sites, and on their path to mix with ambient interstellar gas. The INTEGRAL 26Al emission image confirms earlier findings of clumpiness and an extent along the entire plane of the Galaxy, supporting its origin from massive-star groups. INTEGRAL spectroscopy resolved the line and found Doppler broadenings and…
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