Nucleosynthesis in core-collapse supernova explosions triggered by a quark-hadron phase transition
We explore heavy-element nucleosynthesis in the explosion of massive stars that are triggered by a quark-hadron phase transition during the early post-bounce phase of core-collapse supernovae. The present study is based on general-relativistic radiation hydrodynamics simulations with three-flavor Boltzmann neutrino transport in spherical symmetry, which utilize a quark-hadron hybrid equation of state based on the MIT bag model for strange quark matter. The quark-hadron phase transition inside the stellar core forms a shock wave propagating toward the surface of the proto-neutron star. This shock wave results in an explosion and ejects neutron-rich matter from the outer accreted layers of the proto-neutron star. Later, during the cooling phase, the proto-neutron star develops a proton-rich neutrino-driven wind. We present a detailed analysis of the nucleosynthesis outcome in both neutron-rich and proton-rich ejecta and compare our integrated nucleosynthesis with observations of the solar system and metal-poor stars. For our standard scenario, we find that a "weak" r-process occurs and elements up to the second peak (A similar to 130) are successfully synthesized. Furthermore, uncertainties in the explosion dynamics could barely allow us to obtain the strong r-process which produces heavier isotopes, including the third peak (A similar to 195) and actinide elements.
Item Type | Article |
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Keywords | compact stars, matter, supernovae: general, r-process nucleosynthesis, massive stars, star mergers, nuclear reactions, nucleosynthesis, abundances, hydrodynamics, equation, stars: neutron, dense matter, ejecta, neutrino-driven winds, evolution |
Date Deposited | 15 May 2025 12:35 |
Last Modified | 30 May 2025 23:54 |
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picture_as_pdf - 1112.5684v3.pdf
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subject - Submitted Version