Origin of Plutonium-244 in the Early Solar System
Maria Lugaro, Andr\'es Yag\"ue L\'opez, Benj\'amin So\'os, Benoit, C\^ot\'e, M\'aria Pet\H{o}, Nicole Vassh, Benjamin Wehmeyer, Marco Pignatari

TL;DR
This study explores the origin of short-lived radionuclide 244Pu in the early Solar System, analyzing nucleosynthesis models and galactic chemical evolution to understand its production and timing relative to other isotopes.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of r-process nucleosynthesis models and galactic mixing scenarios to explain the presence of 244Pu in the early Solar System, considering uncertainties in astrophysical sites.
Findings
Last r-process event can explain 244Pu if mixing is localized.
Longer half-life of 244Pu suggests multiple source events.
Estimated formation time of Solar System material is 9-16 Myr after nucleosynthesis events.
Abstract
We investigate the origin in the early Solar System of the short-lived radionuclide 244Pu (with a half life of 80 Myr) produced by the rapid (r) neutron-capture process. We consider two large sets of r-process nucleosynthesis models and analyse if the origin of 244Pu in the ESS is consistent with that of the other r and slow (s) neutron-capture process radioactive nuclei. Uncertainties on the r-process models come from both the nuclear physics input and the astrophysical site. The former strongly affects the ratios of isotopes of close mass (129I/127I, 244Pu/238U, and 247Pu/235U). The 129I/247Cm ratio, instead, which involves isotopes of a very different mass, is much more variable than those listed above and is more affected by the physics of the astrophysical site. We consider possible scenarios for the evolution of the abundances of these radioactive nuclei in the galactic…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
