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Chemical evolution with rotating massive star yields: I. The solar neighbourhood and the s-process elements

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arxiv 1802.02824 v1 pith:QX3TLGPR submitted 2018-02-08 astro-ph.GA

Chemical evolution with rotating massive star yields: I. The solar neighbourhood and the s-process elements

classification astro-ph.GA
keywords starsevolutionmassiveabundancemetallicityyieldsintermediatelight
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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We present a comprehensive study of the abundance evolution of the elements from H to U in the Milky Way halo and local disk. We use a consistent chemical evolution model, metallicity dependent isotopic yields from low and intermediate mass stars and yields from massive stars which include, for the first time, the combined effect of metallicity, mass loss and rotation for a large grid of stellar masses and for all stages of stellar evolution. The yields of massive stars are weighted by a metallicity dependent function of the rotational velocities, constrained by observations as to obtain a primary-like $^{14}$N behavior at low metallicity and to avoid overproduction of s-elements at intermediate metallicities. We show that the solar system isotopic composition can be reproduced to better than a factor of two for isotopes up to the Fe-peak, and at the 10\% level for most pure s-isotopes, both light ones (resulting from the weak s-process in rotating massive stars) and the heavy ones (resulting from the main s-process in low and intermediate mass stars). We conclude that the light element primary process (LEPP), invoked to explain the apparent abundance deficiency of the s-elements with A< 100, is not necessary. We also reproduce the evolution of the heavy to light s-elements abundance ratio ([hs/ls]) - recently observed in unevolved thin disk stars - as a result of the contribution of rotating massive stars at sub-solar metallicities. We find that those stars produce primary F and dominate its solar abundance and we confirm their role in the observed primary behavior of N. In contrast, we show that their action is insufficient to explain the small observed values of C12/C13 in halo red giants, which is rather due to internal processes in those stars.

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Cited by 2 Pith papers

Reviewed papers in the Pith corpus that reference this work. Sorted by Pith novelty score.

  1. The Sc, Ti, and V Abundance Discrepancy: Testing High-Mass IMF Variation and Massive-Star Rotation

    astro-ph.GA 2026-06 unverdicted novelty 3.0

    Rotating massive-star yields at 300 km/s improve agreement with metal-poor Sc, Ti, V abundances in one-zone GCE models, with IMF slope variations providing secondary modulation.

  2. The s- and r- components of the proto-solar composition

    astro-ph.SR 2026-05 unverdicted novelty 2.0

    Overview of methods and recent developments for deriving s- and r-process components of the proto-solar composition.