Fluorine Evolution in the Galactic Halo
Valeria Grisoni, Federico Rizzuti, Gabriele Cescutti

TL;DR
This study uses a stochastic chemical evolution model to investigate fluorine's origins in the Galactic halo, emphasizing the role of rotating massive stars at low metallicities and matching recent low-metallicity observations.
Contribution
First detailed theoretical modeling of fluorine evolution in the Galactic halo at low metallicities, incorporating recent observational data and nucleosynthesis prescriptions.
Findings
Rotating massive stars are key fluorine producers at low metallicities.
Model predicts high [F/Fe] ratios (~2 dex) at [Fe/H]~-4, matching observations.
Fluorine production is significant at high redshift, consistent with JWST data.
Abstract
The chemical evolution of fluorine is still a matter of debate in Galactic archaeology, especially at low metallicities, where it is particularly challenging to obtain the corresponding chemical abundances from observations. We present here the first detailed theoretical study of the chemical evolution of fluorine at low metallicity by means of a stochastic chemical evolution model for the Galactic halo, in light of the most recent data for fluorine, which further pushed observations to lower metallicities down to [Fe/H]-4 dex, more than a factor of 10 lower in metallicity than previous detections. We employ a state-of-the-art stochastic chemical evolution model to follow the evolution in the Galactic halo, which has been shown to reproduce well the main observables in this Galactic component and the abundance patterns of CNO and neutron-capture elements, and we implement…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
