Cosmic nucleosynthesis: a multi-messenger challenge
Roland Diehl, Andreas Korn, Bruno Leibundgut, Maria Lugaro, Anton, Wallner

TL;DR
This review discusses the multi-messenger approaches to understanding cosmic nucleosynthesis, highlighting recent progress in observations, models, and experiments that elucidate the origins and evolution of elements in the universe.
Contribution
It synthesizes recent advances across observational, theoretical, and experimental fields to provide a comprehensive overview of cosmic nucleosynthesis processes.
Findings
Progress in multi-messenger observations of nucleosynthesis products
Confirmation of models through stellar and supernova ejecta observations
Enhanced understanding of cosmic material transport and recycling
Abstract
The origins of the elements and isotopes of cosmic material is a critical aspect of understanding the evolution of the universe. Nucleosynthesis typically requires physical conditions of high temperatures and densities. These are found in the Big Bang, in the interiors of stars, and in explosions with their compressional shocks and high neutrino and neutron fluxes. Many different tools are available to disentangle the composition of cosmic matter, in material of extraterrestrial origins such as cosmic rays, meteorites, stardust grains, lunar and terrestrial sediments, and through astronomical observations across the electromagnetic spectrum. Understanding cosmic abundances and their evolution requires combining such measurements with approaches of astrophysical, nuclear theories and laboratory experiments, and exploiting additional cosmic messengers, such as neutrinos and gravitational…
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