Tracing the Milky Way spiral arms with 26Al -- The role of nova systems in the 2D distribution of 26Al
Arianna Vasini, Emanuele Spitoni, Francesca Matteucci, Gabriele, Cescutti, Massimo della Valle

TL;DR
This study models the 2D distribution of $^{26}$Al in the Milky Way, revealing that nova systems significantly contribute to its production and influence the spiral pattern, challenging the view that massive stars are the sole source.
Contribution
It introduces a detailed 2D chemical evolution model incorporating nova contributions, showing their substantial role in $^{26}$Al production and distribution in the Milky Way.
Findings
Novae contribute approximately 75% of $^{26}$Al.
Novae do not trace star formation rate and concentrate in minima.
Including novae reproduces observed $^{26}$Al mass and distribution.
Abstract
Massive stars are one of the most important and investigated astrophysical production sites of Al, a short-lived radioisotope with 1 Myr half-life. Its short lifetime prevents us from observing its complete chemical history, and only the Al that was recently produced by massive stars can be observed. Hence, it is considered a tracer of star formation rate (SFR). However, important contributions to Al comes from nova systems that pollute the interstellar medium with a large delay, thus partly erasing the correlation between Al and SFR. In this work we describe the 2D distribution of the mass of Al as well as that of massive stars and nova systems in the Milky Way, to investigate their relative contributions to the production of Al. We use a detailed 2D chemical evolution model where the SFR is azimuthally dependent and is required to…
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