Heavy element nucleosynthesis in rotating proto-magnetar winds
Tejas Prasanna, Matthew S. B. Coleman, Todd A. Thompson, Brian D. Metzger, Anirudh Patel, Bradley S. Meyer

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that magnetar-strength magnetic fields and rapid rotation in proto-magnetar winds can produce a robust r-process, potentially explaining a significant portion of the Galactic heavy element abundance, including up to the third peak.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis showing that strong magnetic fields and rotation in proto-magnetar winds enable a robust r-process, extending nucleosynthesis models beyond previous limitations.
Findings
Robust r-process up to the third peak is common in magnetar birth winds.
Magnetized PNS winds could produce 5-100% of Galactic r-process elements.
Overproduction of elements with A<120 and significant production of 92Mo observed.
Abstract
The astrophysical origin of elements synthesized through the rapid neutron capture process (process) is a long standing mystery. The hot and dense environments of core-collapse supernovae have been suggested as potential process sites, particularly the neutrino-driven wind from the newly-born protoneutron star (PNS). Wind models that neglect the potential effects of strong magnetic fields and/or rapid rotation of the PNS typically fail to achieve the necessary conditions for production of the third process peak, but robustly produce a limited or weak process for neutron-rich winds. Axisymmetric magnetohydrodynamic simulations of rotating and non-rotating PNS winds with magnetar-strength fields reveal that high entropy material is quasi-periodically ejected from the equatorial closed zone of the PNS magnetosphere. Here, we post-process tracer particle trajectories from…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsPulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Neutrino Physics Research
