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NUCLEOSYNTHESIS IN STELLAR EVOLUTION AND EXPLOSIONS: ABUNDANCE YIELDS FOR CHEMICAL EVOLUTION. MASSIVE STARS. Marco Limongi INAF – Osservatorio Astronomico di Roma, ITALY and Centre for Stellar and Planetary Astrophysics Monash University – AUSTRALIA Email: marco@oa-roma.inaf.it. Work with:.
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NUCLEOSYNTHESIS IN STELLAR EVOLUTION AND EXPLOSIONS: ABUNDANCE YIELDS FOR CHEMICAL EVOLUTION. MASSIVE STARS Marco Limongi INAF – Osservatorio Astronomico di Roma, ITALY and Centre for Stellar and Planetary Astrophysics Monash University – AUSTRALIA Email: marco@oa-roma.inaf.it Work with: Alessandro Chieffi
Massive Stars, those massive enough to explode as supernovae, play a key role in many fields of astrophysics: Evolution of Galaxies: Light up regions of stellar birth induce star formation Production of most of the elements (those necessary to life) Mixing (winds and radiation) of the ISM Production of neutron stars and black holes Cosmology (PopIII): Reionization of the Universe at z>5 Massive Remnants (Black Holes) AGN progenitors Pregalactic Chemical Enrichment High Energy Astrophysics: Production of long-lived radioactive isotopes: (26Al, 56Co, 57Co, 44Ti, 60Fe) GRB progenitors The understanding of these stars, is crucial for the interpretation of many astrophysical objects
Outline • Basic PreSN Evolutionary Properties of Massive Stars and Their Uncertainties • Explosive Nucleosynthesis and its uncertainties • Present Status of the presupernova and explosion modelling of Massive Stars • Comparison among available yields • Strategies for improvements
g g g H Conv. core g g CNO Cycle g g g H burning Mmin(O) = 14 M t(O)/t(H burning): 0.15 (14 M ) – 0.79 (120 M) MASS LOSS
Hs=0.566 Cs=8.42 10-5 Hs=0.194 Cs=1.18 10-4 Hes=0.414 Ns=1.30 10-2 Hes=0.786 Ns=1.34 10-2 26Als=7 10-6 26Als=2 10-6 Os=7.18 10-4 Os=1.59 10-4 Hs=0.695 Cs=3.18 10-3 Hes=0.285 Ns=1.16 10-3 Os=1.00 10-2 t=6.8 106 yr t=2 107 yr 1H 4He 1H 4He CNO 13C,14N, 17O NeNa,MgAl 23Na, 26Al CNO 13C,14N, 17O NeNa,MgAl 23Na, 26Al WIND t=3.6 106 yr WIND WNL t=2.7 106 yr 1H 4He 1H 4He CNO 13C,14N, 17O NeNa,MgAl 23Na, 26Al CNO 13C,14N, 17O NeNa,MgAl 23Na, 26Al
Major Uncertainties in the computation of core H burning models: • Extension of the Convective Core (Overshooting, Semiconvection) • Mass Loss Both influence the size of the He core that drives the following evolution
He burning The properties of core He burning mainly depend on the size of the He core M ≤ 35 M RSG M > 35 M BSG g g g 3a + 12C(a,g)16O g g g g g
Hs=0.649 Cs=2.00 10-3 Hes=0.331 Ns=4.37 10-3 Os=7.86 10-3 Hs=0.000 Cs=0.432 Hs=0.000 Cs=0.397 Hes=0.422 Hes=0.516 Ns=0.000 Ns=0.000 Os=0.119 Os=0.06 11 25 t=2.0 107 yr t=1.5 106 yr t=6.8 106 yr t=5.3 105 yr 4He,14N 4He,14N 4He 12C, 16O 22Ne, s-proc 4He 12C, 16O 22Ne, s-proc 120 60 WNL t=3.6 106 yr t=3.6 105 yr t=2.7 106 yr t=3.0 105 yr WNL WNE WNE WC WC 4He,12C 4He,12C 4He 12C, 16O 22Ne, s-proc 4He 12C, 16O 22Ne, s-proc
Major Uncertainties in the computation of core He burning models: • Extension of the Convective Core(Overshooting, Semiconvection) • Central 12C mass fraction(Treatment of Convection + 12C(a,g)16O cross section) • Mass Loss(determine which stars explode as RSG and which as BSG) • 22Ne(a,n)25Mg (main neutron source for s-process nucleosynthesis) All these uncertainties affect the size of the CO core that drives the following evolution
Advanced burning stages n g g n n g g n n g g n n n g g Neutrino losses play a dominant role in the evolution of a massive star beyond core He burning At high temperature (T>109 K) neutrino emission from pair production start to become very efficient Evolutionary times reduce dramatically
M < 30 M Explode as RSG M ≥ 30 M Explode as BSG After core He burning At Pre-SN stage
Synthesis of Heavy Elements At high tempreatures a larger number of nuclear reactions are activated Heavy nuclei start to be produced C-burning Ne-burning
Synthesis of Heavy Elements Weak Interactions become efficient O-burning Efficiency scales inversely with the mass
At Si ignition (panel a + panel b) A=45 56Fe A=44 28Si Eq. Clusters Synthesis of Heavy Elements At Oxygen exhaustion Balance between forward and reverse reactions for increasing number of processes c + d a + b At Oxygen exhaustion At Si ignition Sc Si Equilibrium Equilibrium Partial Eq. Out of Eq. Out of Equilibrium 56,57,58Fe, 52,53,54Cr, 55Mn, 59Co, 62Ni NSE
H 11 M 25 M H He He 103 yr 3yr 5 days 0.3yr CO CO O Ne/O Si Ne/O O “Fe” Si “Fe” H H 60 M 120 M He He CO CO Ne/O Ne/O O O Si Si “Fe” “Fe”
H Central He Shell C conv. Shell He Central H Shell O conv. Shell Si burning(Cent.+Sehll) 4He 16O 1H 28Si “Fe” 20Ne 12C Chemical Composition at the PreSN stage
No Mass Loss Radius WIND RSG WNL WNE Final Mass WC/WO CO-Core Mass He-Core Mass He-CC Mass Fe-Core Mass Final Masses at the PreSN stage HEAVY ELEMENTS
Major Uncertainties in the computation of the advanced burning stages: • Treatment of Convection(interaction between mixing and local burning, stability criterion behavior of convective shells final M-R relation explosive nucleosynthesis) • Computation of Nuclear Energy Generation (minimum size of nuclear network and coupling to physical equations, NSE/QSE approximations) • Weak Interactions(determine Ye hydrostatic and explosive nucleosynthesis behavior of core collapse) • Nuclear Cross Sections(nucleosynthesis of all the heavy elements) • Partition Functions(NSE distribution) • Neutrino Losses
4He H Shell He Shell H Central 16O 1H He Central C conv. Shell O conv. Shell Si burning Piston 28Si “Fe” 20Ne 12C Explosive Nucleosynthesis and Chemical Yields Explosion Mechanism Still Uncertain The explosion can be simulated by means of a piston of initial velocity v0, located near the edge of the iron core Piston • Explosion: 1D PPM Lagrangian Hydrocode (Collella & Woodward 1984) • Explosive Nucleosynthesis:same nuclear network adopted in the hydrostatic evolutions v0 is tuned in order to have a given amount of 56Ni ejected and/or a corresponding final kinetic energy Ekin
Z=Z E=1051 erg No Mass Loss SNII SNIb/c RSG WNL WNE Final Mass WC/WO Mass (M) He-Core Mass Fallback Remnant Mass He-CC Mass CO-Core Mass Black Hole Fe-Core Mass Neutron Star Initial Mass (M) The Final Fate of a Massive Star
V Cr Mn Ti Fe Si S Ar Ca Ne Na Mg Al P Cl Si S Ar Ca K Sc Ti Fe Co Ni f(r,T,Ye) f(r,T,Xi) RADIATION DOMINATED: NSE/QSE Si-c Si-i Ox Ne/Cx
Individual Yields Different chemical composition of the ejecta for different masses
Averaged Yields Yields averaged over a Salpeter IMF Global Properties: Initial Composition (Mass Fraction) Final Composition (Mass Fraction) NO Dilution Mrem=0.186 X=0.444 (f=0.64) Y=0.420 (f=1.47) Z=0.136 (f=6.84) X=0.695 Y=0.285 Z=0.020
Major Uncertainties in the simulation of the explosion (remnant mass – nucleosynyhesis): • Prompt vs Delayed Explosion (this may alter both the M-R relation and Ye of the presupernova model) • How to kick the blast wave: • Thermal Bomb – Kinetic Bomb – Piston • Mass Location where the energy is injected • How much energy to inject: • Thermal Bomb (Internal Energy) • Kinetic Bomb (Initial Velocity) • Piston (Initial velocity and trajectory) • How much kinetic energy at infinity (typically ~1051 erg) • Nuclear Cross Sections and Partition Functions
Present Status of the presupernova and explosion modelling of Massive Stars
Databases of Cross Sections Experimental: Caughlan et al. (1985) Caughlan & Fowler (1988) Angulo et al. (1999) NACRE Bao et al. (2000): (n,g) reactions Iliadis et al. (2001): (p,g) reactions Jaeger et al. (2001): 22Ne(a,n)25Mg Kunz et al. (2001): 12C(a,g)16O Formicola et al. (2004) LUNA collaboration: 14N(p,g)15O LENA collaboration: 14N(p,g)15O Theoretical: Woosley et al. 1978 Rauscher & Thielemann (2000) REACLIB Fuller, Fowler & Newmann (1982,1985) (Weak) Oda et al. (1984) (Weak) Takahshi & Yokoi (1987) (Weak) Langanke & Martinez Pinedo (2000) (Weak)
Z=Z Z=Z
Global Properties Z=Z Final Composition (for each solar mass returned to the ISM) LC06 WW95 RHHW02 X=0.444 (f=0.64) Y=0.420 (f=1.47) Z=0.136 (f=6.84) X=0.463 (f=0.65) Y=0.391 (f=1.42) Z=0.146 (f=7.30) X=0.482 (f=0.65) Y=0.340 (f=1.42) Z=0.178 (f=8.90)
Strategies for improvements Round Table and Comparison Among: • Evolutionary Codes(Assumptions, Numerical Algorithms, etc.) • Input Physics(EOS, Opacities, Cross Sections, Neutrino Losses, Electron Screenings, etc.) • Nuclear Network (extension, how it is included into the code) • Computation of Models under the same code setup Input Physics Repository • EOS, Opacities, Cross Sections, etc.(Tables and Codes) Additional comments welcome...... Pre/Post SN models and explosive yields available at http://www.mporzio.astro.it/~limongi