Slow White Dwarf Mergers as a New Galactic Source of Trans-Iron Elements
Umberto Battino, Claudia Lederer-Woods, Claudia Travaglio, Friedrich Konrad R\"opke, and Brad Gibson

TL;DR
This study explores how slow white dwarf mergers can produce trans-iron elements through neutron capture processes, offering a new potential source for heavy elements in the galaxy.
Contribution
It introduces a novel model of slow white dwarf mergers that can synthesize trans-iron elements, expanding understanding of galactic chemical evolution.
Findings
Neutron source reaction 22Ne(a,n)25Mg is activated during mergers.
The models produce a weak s-process abundance pattern peaking at Zr.
Enrichment of external layers depends on the 12C+12C reaction rate.
Abstract
The astrophysical origins of the heaviest stable elements that we observe today in the Solar System are still not fully understood. Recent studies have demonstrated that H-accreting white dwarfs (WDs) in a binary sys- tem exploding as type Ia supernovae could be an efficient p-process source beyond iron. However, both observational evidence and stellar models challenge the required frequency of these events. In this work, we calculate the evolution and nucleosynthesis in slowly merging carbon-oxygen WDs. As our models approach the Chandrasekhar mass during the merger phase, the 22Ne(a,n)25Mg neutron source reaction is activated in the external layers of the primary WD, where the carbon-rich material accreted from the secondary WD is burned via the 12C+12C reaction, which provides the necessary {\alpha}-particles via the 12C(12C,{\alpha})20Ne channel. The resulting neutron capture…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Nuclear physics research studies · Astro and Planetary Science
