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Abundance Patterns to Probe Stellar Nucleosynthesis and Chemical Evolution. Francesca Primas. Setting the Stage. 1. High-z universe, i.e. looking at objects in their infancy stages. DLA: dominant reservoir of neutral baryons measure the mean metallicity in HI (5< z < 0).
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Abundance Patterns to ProbeStellar Nucleosynthesisand Chemical Evolution Francesca Primas
Setting the Stage 1. High-z universe, i.e. looking at objects in their infancy stages • DLA: dominant reservoir of neutral baryons • measure the mean metallicity in HI (5< z < 0) 2. Nearby universe, i.e. looking at the fossilized imprint left by the first generations of stars • EMP: precious witnesses of the early evolutionary phases of our Galaxy Identify the imprint left by the first SNe explosions Old Metal-poor [Fe/H] = log(Fe/H)* - log(Fe/H)sun
Stellar Nucleosynthesis light elements BBN, CR spallation alpha and iron-group SN physics (time delays) and SN imprint heavies n-capture
The Light Elements Li Be B (670.7nm, 313.0nm, 250.0nm) • Implications for cosmology BBN vs IBBN (Li) • Implications for stellar structure Li T=2.5x106K Be T=3.0x106K B T=5.0x106K • Implications for nucleosynthesis and cosmic-ray physics classical spallation (Reeves et al. 1970) ? primary ? neutrino-spallation (11B) ?
Cayrel et al. 2004 Latest Abundances McWilliam et al 1995
What Have We Learned • well defined trends with low dispersion all the way to the most MP stars • as quality , the dispersion • -- SMALL in most cases: 0.05-0.15dex • -- THINNEST of all: Cr,Ti • -- MOST DISPERSED: Mn (~0.2dex for [Fe/H]<-3) • there is NO unambiguous detection of products of PISN • constraints on SN II yields: M~15-50 Msun, but also up to 100Msun or hypernovae are able to reproduce the observed • trends (mixing and fallback) Abundancedispersion s=0.05dex! Cayrel et al. (2004) data
Stellar Highlights HE 0107-5240 ([Fe/H]=-5.3)and HE 1327-2326 ([Fe/H]=-5.5 (large[C/Fe], but different in N, Na, Mg, Al) C-rich metal-poor stars: 20-30% (?) r-process rich stars
The Detailed Picture CS 22892-052 Sneden et al. 2003 CS 31082-001 Hill et al. 2002 Galaxy at z=2.63 Prochaska et al. 2003
Hill et al. 2002 1. Does Os really deviate from the solar r-process pattern ? Not anymore after new gf value (Ivarsson et al. 2003) ==> Os=Ir 2. Still missing input atomic physics for Ho, Lu, and Yb!
What’s next ? --->Atomic physics and (best) abundance indicators --->Model atmospheres and theory of line formation LTE vs NLTE 1D vs 3D Asplund 2005 (ARAA) Asplund 2002
1D vs 3D CNO Fe Collet et al 2006
Cosmo-chronometry EMP = old ?? Not quite, presumably old ==> age In r-process rich stars: Dt = 46.67(log(Th/S)o - log(Th/S)obs ) Problem: evaluation of the log(Th/S)o based on the assumption that the r-process is universal [ cf. Cowan (pro) and Goriely (con) ] Warning: actinides and lower-mass r-nuclei may vary strongly (despite the constancy for Z=56-82) [ cf. Hill et al. 2002, Honda et al. 2003] Th (and U) seem to be over-abundant: log(Th/Eu) = -0.22 (wrt ~ -0.6! for similar stars)
Cosmo-chronometry Age difference ?NO, otherwise CS 31082-001 would have a negative age, compared to the other n-rich stars ! Ab initio enhancement ?IF SO, r-process may not be universal ! Th/Eu =? a reliable chronometer CS 31082-001:Th and U were detected and used Dt = 21.76(log(U/Th)o - log(U/Th)obs) +similar ionization and excitation potentials --> errors largely cancel out + initial production ratio: more robust against variations in n-exposure (nuclear reaction network code containing more than 3500 isotopes with all relevant reactions! ) Nilsson et al. 2002a,b Goriely & Arnould 2001 ! 8 Th lines, each with gf determined better than 0.08dex 1 U line with gf determined better than 0.06dex log(U/Th)o = 0.50 (0.02) Age = 14.0 +/- 2.4 Gyr log(U/Th)obs = -0.74 (0.15) … -0.94 (0.11)