Distinct First-to-Second Peak Yield Ratios and Timescales Reveal a Sub-dominant Prompt Channel
Yossef Zenati, Paz Beniamini, Kenta Hotokezaka

TL;DR
This paper models multiple neutron-capture sources with different timescales to explain complex stellar abundance patterns, emphasizing the importance of prompt and delayed channels like neutron-star mergers and AGB stars.
Contribution
It develops a chemical-evolution model that constrains the delay-times, rates, and yield ratios of distinct neutron-capture sources, matching observed abundance trends.
Findings
Delayed r-process (likely neutron-star mergers) dominates Eu production (>95%).
Prompt channel produces first-peak elements with minimal Eu, explaining [Y/Eu] trends.
Lower limit on yield ratio between prompt and delayed channels is ≥3.4.
Abstract
Stellar abundances reveal non-monotonic [Y/Eu] and [Sr/Eu] evolution, a systematic decline with increasing [Eu/H] at low metallicity, a minimum at and then a rise at high metallicity. This behavior requires at least three distinct neutron-capture sources operating on different timescales. We develop a one-zone chemical-evolution model constraining their typical delay-times, rates, and yield ratios. Reproducing the observed and sequences requires, a delayed -process channel (most likely binary neutron-star mergers) dominating Eu production ( of total Eu). A prompt channel preferentially producing first-peak elements with minimal Eu, explaining the increasing [Y/Eu] at decreasing [Eu/H] below ; and delayed AGB -process enrichment with delays greater than \,Gyr reproducing…
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