Radioactive nuclei in the early Solar System: analysis of the 15 isotopes produced by core-collapse supernovae
Thomas V. Lawson, Marco Pignatari, Richard J. Stancliffe, Jacqueline, den Hartogh, Sam Jones, Chris L. Fryer, Brad K. Gibson, Maria Lugaro

TL;DR
This study investigates how core-collapse supernovae produce 15 short-lived radioactive isotopes relevant to the early Solar System, analyzing the effects of explosion energy and remnant mass on isotope yields across various models.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of supernova nucleosynthesis of SLRs, highlighting the impact of explosion parameters and remnant mass on isotope production, which was not comprehensively explored before.
Findings
$^{92}$Nb yield varies by five orders of magnitude with remnant mass.
$^{60}$Fe yield increases two orders of magnitude with explosion energy.
Isotopes from explosive C- and He-burning are most affected by explosion energy.
Abstract
Short-lived radioactive isotopes (SLRs) with half-lives between 0.1 to 100 Myr can be used to probe the origin of the Solar System. In this work, we examine the core-collapse supernovae production of the 15 SLRs produced: Al, Cl, Ca, Mn, Fe, Nb, Tc, Tc, Pd, Sn, I, Cs, Sm, Hf, and Pb. We probe the impact of the uncertainties of the core-collapse explosion mechanism by examining a collection of 62 core-collapse models with initial masses of 15, 20, and 25M, explosion energies between 3.410 and 1.810 ergs and compact remnant masses between 1.5Mand 4.89M. We identify the impact of both explosion energy and remnant mass on the final yields of the SLRs. Isotopes produced within the innermost regions of the star, such as…
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