3 research outputs found
Evolution of Fluorine Abundances with the \nu-Process
We calculate the evolution of fluorine in the solar neighborhood with the
\nu-process of core-collapse supernovae, the results of which are in good
agreement with the observations of field stars. The \nu-process operating in
supernovae causes the [F/O] ratio to plateau at [O/H] < -1.2, followed by a
rapid increase toward [O/H] ~ -0.5 from the contribution of Asymptotic Giant
Branch stars. The plateau value of [F/O] depends on the neutrino luminosity
released by core-collapse supernovae and may be constrained by using future
observations of field stars at low metallicities. For globular clusters, the
handful of [F/O] measurements suggest that the relative contribution from
low-mass supernovae is smaller in these systems than in the field.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, Accepted for publication in ApJ
Explosive Nucleosynthesis of Weak r-Process Elements in Extremely Metal-Poor Core-Collapse Supernovae
There have been attempts to fit the abundance patterns of extremely
metal-poor stars with supernova nucleosynthesis models for the lighter elements
than Zn. On the other hand, observations have revealed that the presence of EMP
stars with peculiarly high ratio of "weak r-process elements" Sr, Y and Zr.
Although several possible processes were suggested for the origin of these
elements, the complete solution for reproducing those ratios is not found yet.
In order to reproduce the abundance patterns of such stars, we investigate a
model with neutron rich matter ejection from the inner region of the
conventional mass-cut. We find that explosive nucleosynthesis in a high energy
supernova (or "hypernova") can reproduce the high abundances of Sr, Y and Zr
but that the enhancements of Sr, Y and Zr are not achieved by nucleosynthesis
in a normal supernova. Our results imply that, if these elements are ejected
from a normal supernova, nucleosynthesis in higher entropy flow than that of
the supernova shock is required.Comment: 27pages, 15figures; ApJ accepte