Synthesis of thorium and uranium in asymptotic giant branch stars
A. Choplin, S. Goriely, L. Siess

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that actinides like thorium and uranium can be synthesized in asymptotic giant branch stars via the intermediate neutron capture process, challenging the notion that the r-process is the only source.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed stellar model showing actinide production through the i-process in AGB stars, supported by observational evidence from a metal-poor star.
Findings
Actinides can be produced in AGB stars via the i-process.
The surface Th and U abundances match observations of a CEMP-r/s star.
This suggests multiple stellar sites contribute to actinide nucleosynthesis.
Abstract
The intermediate neutron capture process (i-process) operates at neutron densities between those of the slow and rapid neutron-capture processes. It can be triggered by the ingestion of protons in a convective helium-burning region. One possible astrophysical site is low-mass low-metallicity asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars. We study here the possibility that actinides (particularly Th and U) may be significantly synthesized through i-process nucleosynthesis in AGB stars. We computed a 1 model at [Fe/H] with the stellar evolution code STAREVOL. We used a nuclear network of 1160 species from H to Cf coupled to the transport processes. During the proton ingestion event, the neutron density goes up to cm. While most of the nuclear flow cycles in the neutron-rich Pb-Bi-Po region, a non-negligible fraction leaks towards heavier elements and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstro and Planetary Science · Nuclear physics research studies · High-pressure geophysics and materials
