Modeling the emission lines from r-process elements in Supernova nebulae
Giacomo Ricigliano, Kenta Hotokezaka, Almudena Arcones

TL;DR
This paper models nebular emission from r-process elements in supernovae to assess their detectability, highlighting the potential of JWST to observe heavy element signatures in supernova remnants.
Contribution
It develops a NLTE model for supernova nebulae to predict emission features of heavy r-process elements, aiding future observational efforts.
Findings
Heavy elements influence nebular cooling if they constitute at least 1% of ejecta.
Detectable signatures of heavy elements may appear around 1-10 micrometers.
JWST could detect forbidden lines from heavy r-process elements in supernova remnants.
Abstract
The origin of heavy r-process elements in the universe is still a matter of great debate, with a confirmed scenario being neutron star (NS) mergers. Additional relevant sites could be specific classes of events, such as gamma-ray burst (GRB) Supernovae (SNe), where a central engine could push neutron-rich material outwards, contributing to the ejecta of the massive exploding star. Here, we investigate our ability to infer the production of heavy elements in such scenarios, on the basis of the observed nebular emission. We solve the steady-state ionization, level population, and thermal balance, for optically thin ejecta in non-local thermodynamic equilibrium (NLTE), in order to explore the role of heavy elements in cooling the gas, and their imprint in the emergent spectrum a few hundreds days post-explosion. We find that heavy elements would be relevant in the cooling process of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Scientific Research and Discoveries
