The production of LiBeB isotopes by nuclear and neutrino spallation are
compared in the framework of galactic evolutionary models. As motivated by
γ-ray observations of Orion, different possible sources of low-energy C
and O nuclei are considered, such as supernovae of various masses and WC stars.
We confirm that the low energy nuclei (LEN), injected in molecular clouds by
stellar winds and type II supernovae originating from the most massive
progenitors, can very naturally reproduce the observed Be and B evolution in
the early galaxy (halo phase). Assuming the global importance of the LEN
component, we compute upper and lower bounds to the neutrino process
contribution corresponding to limiting cases of LEN particle spectra. A
consistent solution is found with a spectrum of the kind proposed by Ramaty
\etal (1995a,b), e.g. flat up to Ec=30 MeV/n and decreasing abruptly above.
This solution fulfills the challenge of explaining at the same time the general
Be and B evolution, and their solar system abundances without overproducing
\li7 at very low metallicities, and the meteoritic \b11/\b10 ratio. In this
case, neutrino spallation is constrained to play a limited role in the genesis
of the solar system \b11. Galactic cosmic rays (GCR) become operative late in
the evolution of the disk ([Fe/H]>-1), but their contribution to the solar
abundances of \be9, \b10 and \b11 is not dominant (35\%, 30\% and 20\%
respectively). Thus, with this LEN spectrum, GCR are {\it not}\ the main source
of \be9 and B in the Galaxy. The most favorable case for neutrinos, (adopting
the same kind of spectrum) has Ec=20 MeV/n. Even in this case, the neutrino
yields of Woosley and Weaver (1995) must to be reduced by a factor of 5 to
avoid \b11 overproduction. Furthermore, this solution leads to a high B/BeComment: 19 pages, 5 postscript figures, uses plain LaTeX, also available at
http://www.nd.edu/~bfields/vcfo.htm