Journal article

Compact stellar binary assembly in the first nuclear star clusters and r-process synthesis in the early universe

E Ramirez-Ruiz, M Trenti, M MacLeod, LF Roberts, WH Lee, MI Saladino-Rosas

Astrophysical Journal Letters | Published : 2015

Abstract

Investigations of elemental abundances in the ancient and most metal deficient stars are extremely important because they serve as tests of variable nucleosynthesis pathways and can provide critical inferences of the type of stars that lived and died before them. The presence of r-process elements in a handful of carbon-enhanced metal-poor (CEMP-r) stars, which are assumed to be closely connected to the chemical yield from the first stars, is hard to reconcile with standard neutron star mergers. Here we show that the production rate of dynamically assembled compact binaries in high-z nuclear star clusters can attain a sufficient high value to be a potential viable source of heavy r-process m..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by National Stroke Foundation


Funding Acknowledgements

We thank S. Shen, R. Cooke, E. Kirby, C. Miller, M. Rees, and S. Rosswog for insightful discussions as well as the editor and referees for insightful suggestions. We acknowledge financial support from the Packard Foundation, NSF (AST0847563), UCMEXUS (CN-12-578), and the Einstein Fellowship (L.R.).