Unlocking the mystery of Sr synthesis in the early Galaxy through analysis of barium isotopes in very metal-poor stars
T. M. Sitnova, L. Lombardo, L. I. Mashonkina, F. Rizzuti, G. Cescutti, C. J. Hansen, P. Bonifacio, E. Caffau, A. Koch-Hansen, G. Meynet, R. Fernandes de Melo

TL;DR
This study analyzes barium isotopes and element abundances in very metal-poor stars to understand the early sources of strontium and barium, revealing the role of the early s-process in massive stars before main s-process enrichment.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the origin of Sr in the early Galaxy by linking isotope analysis with s- and r-process contributions in ancient stars.
Findings
Higher s-process contribution correlates with increased [Sr/Ba] and [Sr/Eu] ratios.
Early s-process in massive stars likely produced the additional Sr observed.
No significant contribution from the i-process was detected in the sample.
Abstract
We determine the contributions of the rapid (r) and slow (s) neutron capture processes to the Ba isotope mixture, along with Ba, Eu, and Sr NLTE abundances, in a sample of very metal-poor stars. The selected stars formed before the contribution from the main s-process in low- and intermediate-mass stars became significant. Some of our sample stars are enhanced in Sr, with [Sr/Ba] reaching up to 0.7. These stars gained their high Sr abundance from a poorly understood process, which may appear to be a weak s-process or a weak r-process. Our aim is to uncover the nature of this additional Sr source. The abundances derived from the resonance Ba II lines are influenced by the adopted Ba isotope mixture. We compute Ba isotope mixtures corresponding to different r- to s-process contributions and determine the corresponding abundances from the Ba II resonance lines in each sample star.…
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