R-process nucleosynthesis during explosion of low-mass neutron stars in close binaries

Abstract

We investigate the explosion of low-mass neutron stars through Newtonian hydrodynamic simulations. We couple the hydrodynamics to a nuclear reaction network consisting of ∼4500\sim 4500 isotopes to study the impact of nuclear reactions, mainly neutron capture, β\beta-decays, and spontaneous fission of nuclei, on the development of hydrodynamic instability of a neutron star. We show that after mass removal from the surfaces, low-mass neutron stars undergo delayed explosion, and an electron anti-neutrino burst with a peak luminosity of ∼3×1050\sim3\times10^{50} erg s−1^{-1} is emitted, while the ejecta is heated to ∼109\sim10^{9} K. A robust r-process nucleosynthesis is realized in the ejecta. Lanthanides and heavy elements near the second and third r-process peaks are synthesized as end products of nucleosynthesis, suggesting that the explosions of low-mass neutron stars could be a potentially important source of solar chemical elements.Comment: 12 pages, 13 figure

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