Evidence from Disrupted Halo Dwarfs that $r$-process Enrichment via Neutron Star Mergers is Delayed by $\gtrsim500$ Myrs
Rohan P. Naidu, Alexander P. Ji, Charlie Conroy, Ana Bonaca, Yuan-Sen, Ting, Dennis Zaritsky, Lieke A. C. van Son, Floor S. Broekgaarden, Sandro, Tacchella, Vedant Chandra, Nelson Caldwell, Phillip Cargile, Joshua S., Speagle

TL;DR
This study uses stellar spectroscopy of disrupted dwarf galaxies to show that $r$-process element enrichment from neutron star mergers is delayed by at least 500 million years, suggesting a longer timescale than previously thought.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence that $r$-process enrichment via neutron star mergers is delayed by over 500 million years, challenging existing models of rapid enrichment.
Findings
Neutron star mergers are delayed by 500-1000 million years for $r$-process enrichment.
Core-collapse supernovae contribute significantly to early $r$-process elements.
Delay times are longer than merger times from stellar population models.
Abstract
The astrophysical origins of -process elements remain elusive. Neutron star mergers (NSMs) and special classes of core-collapse supernovae (rCCSNe) are leading candidates. Due to these channels' distinct characteristic timescales (rCCSNe: prompt, NSMs: delayed), measuring -process enrichment in galaxies of similar mass, but differing star-formation durations might prove informative. Two recently discovered disrupted dwarfs in the Milky Way's stellar halo, Kraken and \textit{Gaia}-Sausage Enceladus (GSE), afford precisely this opportunity: both have , but differing star-formation durations of Gyrs and Gyrs. Here we present Magellan/MIKE spectroscopy for 31 stars from these systems, detecting the -process element Eu in all stars. Stars from both systems have similar [Mg/H], but Kraken…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
