- R-process
The r-process is a
nucleosynthesis process occurring in core-collapsesupernova e (see alsosupernova nucleosynthesis ) responsible for the creation of approximately half of theneutron -rich atomic nuclei that are heavier than iron. The process entails a succession of "rapid"neutron capture s oniron seed nuclei, hence the name r-process. The other predominant mechanism for the production of heavy elements is thes-process , which is nucleosynthesis by means of "slow" neutron captures, primarily occurring in AGB stars, and together these two processes account for a majority of galactic chemical evolution of elements heavier than iron.History
The r-process was seen to be needed from the relative abundances of isotopes of heavy elements and from a newly published table of abundances by
Hans Suess andHarold Urey in 1956. Among other things, this data showed abundance peaks forGermanium ,Xenon , andPlatinum . According toquantum mechanics and the nuclear shell model,radioactive nuclei that decay intoisotopes of these elements have closed neutron shells near theneutron drip line . This implies that some abundant nuclei must be created by rapidneutron capture , and it was only a matter of determining what other nuclei could be accounted for by such a process. A table apportioning the heavy isotopes betweens-process and r-process was published in a famous review paper in 1957 [E. M. Burbidge, G. R. Burbidge, W. A. Fowler, and F. Hoyle.Reviews of Modern Physics , 29 (1957) 547.] , which proposed the theory ofstellar nucleosynthesis and set the frame-work for contemporarynuclear astrophysics .Nuclear physics
Immediately after a core-collapse supernova, there is an extremely high
neutron flux (on the order of 1022 neutrons per cm² per second) andtemperature , so thatneutron capture s occur much faster than beta-minus decays far from stability, meaning that the r-process "runs up" along theneutron drip line . The only two hold-ups inhibiting this process of climbing the neutron drip line are a notable decreases in the neutron-capture cross section at nuclei with closed neutron shells, and the degree of nuclear stability in the heavy-isotope region, which terminates the r-process when such nuclei become readily unstable to spontaneous fission (currently believed to be in the neutron-rich region near "A" = 270 (number of nucleons) in the chart of nuclides). After the neutron flux decreases, these highly unstable radioactive nuclei quickly decay to form stable, neutron-rich nuclei. So, while thes-process creates an abundance of stable nuclei with closed neutron shells, the r-process creates an abundance of nuclei about 10Atomic mass unit s below the s-process peaks, as the r-process nuclei decay back towards stability on a constant "A" line in the chart of nuclides.Astrophysical sites
The most widely believed candidate site for the r-process are core-collapse
supernova e (spectral "Type Ib", "Ic" and "II"), which provide the necessary physical conditions for the R-process. However, the abundance of r-process nuclei requires that either only a small fraction of supernovae eject r-process nuclei to theinterstellar medium , or that each supernova ejects only a very small amount of r-process material. A recently proposed alternative solution is thatneutron star mergers (a binary star system of two neutron stars that collide) may also play a role in the production of r-process nuclei, but this has yet to be observationally confirmed.References
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