The $\gamma$-process nucleosynthesis in core-collapse supernovae II. Effect of the explosive recipe
Lorenzo Roberti, Marco Pignatari, Chris L. Fryer, Maria Lugaro

TL;DR
This study explores how different explosion energies and stellar parameters in core-collapse supernovae influence the synthesis of p-nuclei, revealing that higher explosion energies generally enhance their production, especially in models with C-O shell mergers.
Contribution
It provides the first extensive analysis of how varying CCSN explosion prescriptions affect p-nuclei yields across different stellar models, challenging previous assumptions.
Findings
P-nuclei yields are marginally affected by explosion prescriptions if C-O shell merger occurs.
Increasing explosion energy generally boosts p-nuclei production, especially for light p-nuclei.
Light p-nuclei yields can increase by up to three orders of magnitude in certain models.
Abstract
The -process in core-collapse supernovae (CCSNe) can produce a number of neutron-deficient stable isotopes heavier than iron (p-nuclei). However, current model predictions do to not fully reproduce the solar abundances. We investigate the impact of different explosion energies and parameters on the nucleosynthesis of p-nuclei, by studying stellar models with different initial masses and CCSN explosions. We find that the total p-nuclei yields are only marginally affected by the CCSN explosion prescriptions if the -process production is already efficient in the stellar progenitors due to a C-O shell merger. In most of CCSN explosions from progenitors without C-O shell merger, the -process yields increase with the explosion energy up to an order of magnitude, depending on the progenitor structure and the CCSN prescriptions. The trend of the p-nuclei production with…
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