Effects of Hoyle state de-excitation on $\nu p$-process nucleosynthesis and Galactic chemical evolution
Hirokazu Sasaki, Yuta Yamazaki, Toshitaka Kajino, Grant J. Mathews

TL;DR
This study investigates how particle-induced de-excitation of the Hoyle state affects the $ u p$-process nucleosynthesis and galactic chemical evolution, revealing that hypernovae significantly contribute to the production of certain p-nuclei.
Contribution
It demonstrates that Hoyle state de-excitation has minimal impact on the $ u p$-process, but hypernovae play a crucial role in producing p-nuclei like Mo and Ru isotopes in galactic evolution.
Findings
Proton scattering enhances nucleosynthesis at low temperatures.
Enhanced triple-alpha rate reduces Mo and Ru production in supernovae.
Hypernovae significantly increase p-nuclei abundances in galactic chemical evolution.
Abstract
The partcle-induced hadronic de-excitation of the Hoyle state in C induced by inelastic scattering in a hot and dense plasma can enhance the triple-alpha reaction rate. This prevents the production of heavy nuclei within the neutrino-driven winds of core-collapse supernovae and raises a question as to the contribution of proton-rich neutrino-driven winds as the origin of -nuclei in the solar system abundances. Here we study -process nucleosynthesis in proton-rich neutrino-driven winds relevant to the production of and by considering such particle-induced de-excitation. We show that the enhancement of the triple-alpha reaction rate induced by neutron inelastic scattering hardly affects the -process, while the proton scattering contributes to the nucleosynthesis in proton-rich neutrino-driven winds at low temperature. The…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Nuclear physics research studies · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies
