Title: Nucleosynthesis
1Nucleosynthesis
GEOL 3022 Planetary Geology 2
2Recap
- Big Bang produces H, He
- Other elements caused by stellar
nucleosynthesis(B2FH, 1957)
3Recap
- H burning
- 1st generation PP
- CNO cycle
- He burning
- triple a
4Recap
- If star is massive enough, successive burning
reactions - C, O burning
- Mg, Si burning
- If no fuel (and no mass) star dies
- white dwarf
5Fusion
- Progressive building reactions
- 4p -gt 4He releases 90 of available E
- fusion proceeds to 56Fe (e process)
- e equilibrium
- forward reactions compete with back
- buildup of Fe abundance peak
- progressive increase in T of reactions
- Up to T9 (T 1x 109 K)
6Heavy nuclei
- Protons, Alpha reactions up to Fe peak
- Neutrons allow a nuclear pathway to heavy nuclides
7Nuclear Equilibrium
8Neutrons
- Release of neutrons
- 13C(a,n)16O, 22Ne(a,n)25Mg, 25Mg(a,n)28Si
- Reaction with Fe group elements (e.g. Fe)
- 56Fe(n,g)57Fe(n,g)58Fe(n,g)59Fe(n,g)60Fe(n,g)
61Fe - 59Fe-gt59Cob (44 days)
- 60Fe-gt60Co (105 a) -gt60Ni (5.3 a)
- 61Fe -gt61Co (6 min) -gt 61Ni (1.7 h)
- Timescale of reaction important
9S process
- slow addition of neutrons compared with decay
times - nuclei stay close to valley of stability
- branching ratios
- indicator of n abundance
- Theoretically up to 209Bi
- Isotope abundances depend on neutron capture
cross sections
10Chart of the Nuclides
11S -process
- astrophysics
- AGB (assymptotic giant branch) stars
- observation of Tc in stellar atmospheres
- Tc shortlived, extinct on Earth
- also Ba, Zr, Mo lines visible
- AGB stars rapidly lose mass
- dust recycled into ISM
12More Heavy nuclides
- S-process to 209Bi
- Heaviest stable nuclide
- So how do we get to 238U, 232Th?
- Require rapid addition of neutrons before decay
- r-process
13r process
- Rapid addition of neutrons
- Before ß decay
- Fast neutrons
- Reactions on timescale of lt 1 s
- Nuclides driven far to right of nuclear stability
line - nuclides then decay back to stable path
14Pathways
Nuclides can have s and/or r contributions
S only 96Mo is shielded by 96Zr from
r-process R only 96Zr is shielded from s by
95Zr decay SR 95Mo has both S R
contributions Branch 95Zr decay or neutron
addition before?
15Shielded nuclei
- r process nuclei decay diagonally back to stable
nuclei - first stable isotope takes all of that isobar
- some nuclei protected from r process input
- similarly, some nuclei r process only
- (nuclei isolated to right of stable nuclei)
16R and S abundances
- Structure to s, r abundance curves
- Can be related to magic nuclei
- N50,82,128
17Magic Nuclei
- Chemical analog
- filled electron shells of noble gases
- Electric force
- Nuclear
- Stable configurations of p n
- Strong force
- Magic (p or n) and doubly magic (p n)
- 2, 8, 20, 4He,16O,40Ca (are doubly magic)
18Heavy Magic Nuclei
- s, r abundance peaks evident
- related to magic nuclei number
- s and r offset
- why?
- r process nuclei meet magic numbers off the
stable nuclei line. They decay diagonally back
to the stable nuclei curve and hence end up
before the magic s-process nuclei.
19Magic continued
- R-process contributions get stuck at magic
numbers, then decay back
s
r
s
r
s
r
20Astrophysical Modelling
- r-process
- numerical codes attempt to build nuclei in their
observed abundances - good to factor of two
- s-process
- Primarily neutron capture cross sections
- branching ratios
- resonances of reactions
21Astrophysical Sites
- R-process
- Explosive
- Supernovae
- 1 per 200 yr per galaxy (10-3 solar mass)
- S-process
- Controlled burning
- AGB stars
- 1 per year (10-5 solar masses)
22Explosive nucleosynthesis
- Supernovae (Type I, Type II)
- Type I (no H in spectrum)
- White dwarfs accreting mass from companion
- Type II (H in spectrum)
- Core collapse
- Novae
- Flashing of accreted H on white dwarf
23Nova Cygni 1992
24Type I Supernova
25Supernova (Type II)
25 solar mass star, dying
26Supernova 1987a
Visible in Southern hemisphere in Large
Magellenic Cloud
27Supernovae
28P process
- stable nuclei to left of s-process track
- E.g. 92Mo
29Astrophysics of P process
- p-process
- (p,g) reactions
- photodisintegration (g,n)
- Astrophysical site uncertain
- maybe related to r-process
- supernova with extreme photon density
- and abundant protons
30X - process
- Nuclei blown apart from high energy collisions
- Fragments e.g.
- 28Si (?) ? 21Ne 4He 3He
- 16O ? 9Be 7Li
- Be, Li quickly destroyed in burning reactions and
so are not remnants of stellar nucleosynthesis
31B2FH
Burbidge, Burbidge, Fowler and Hoyle, 1957
- 8 processes
- H burning
- He burning
- a
- e
- s
- r
- p
- x (spallation)
32Our link to the stars