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R-Process Alliance: Abundances of >2000 metal-poor stars

ORAL

Abstract

About half the elements heavier than iron in the Universe, like silver and gold, are created in the rapid neutron-capture (r-)process. However, today, almost 70 years after the theoretical prediction of this process, it is still highly debated what type of stellar explosions can take place and their contribution to galactic chemical evolution. One of the best places to search for answers is in ancient, metal-poor stars. Their chemical makeup is like a time capsule, a direct fingerprint of the elements produced by the stellar generations that came before them. But two essential samples are needed: (1) a large sample of metal-poor stars to provide robust statistics on r-process enhancement and (2) a sizable sample of r-process-enhanced stars bright enough to allow detailed measurements of all the elements involved. That's where the R-Process Alliance (RPA) comes in. In 2016, the RPA launched a groundbreaking survey, gathering spectra from over 2,000 stars. I will present the results of the analysis of this sample, which maps the abundances of r-process elements using the largest homogeneously analyzed sample of metal-poor stars ever assembled. With this data, the RPA provides the first statistical dataset to answer big questions, like: How often does the r-process occur? Do multiple sites produce it? And what are the specific conditions at these stellar sites?

Presenters

  • Terese T Hansen

    Stockholm University

Authors

  • Terese T Hansen

    Stockholm University

  • Anna Frebel

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology

  • Ian U Roederer

    North Carolina State University

  • Erika M Holmbeck

    Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

  • Rana Ezzeddine

    University of Florida

  • Charli M Sakari

    San Francisco State University

  • Vinicius M Placco

    NSF NOIRLab

  • Timothy C Beers

    University of Notre Dame

  • Mila Racca

    Stockholm University