2012
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/201118643
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Silver and palladium help unveil the nature of a second r-process

Abstract: Context. The rapid neutron-capture process, which created about half of the heaviest elements in the solar system, is believed to have been unique. Many recent studies have shown that this uniqueness is not true for the formation of lighter elements, in particular those in the atomic number range 38 < Z < 48. Among these, palladium (Pd) and especially silver (Ag) are expected to be key indicators of a possible second r-process, but until recently they have been studied only in a few stars. We therefore target … Show more

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Cited by 138 publications
(230 citation statements)
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References 111 publications
(226 reference statements)
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“…This scatter has been found in numerous previous studies, and points towards differences in the formation sites and/or processes involved, if these processes are assumed to be robust and produce similar amounts of heavy elements in each event (see, e.g., Hansen et al 2014). Figure 7 compares the X-Shooter measurements of the [Sr/Fe], [Ba/Fe], and [Ba/Sr] abundance ratios for our programme stars to larger samples with high-resolution determinations from Hansen et al (2012Hansen et al ( , 2015, and Placco et al (2014b). As seen from these figures, the CEMP-no stars follow the general trend of stars without C-enhancement predicted by standard Galactic chemical evolution (GCE) models, while the CEMP-s stars increase the star-to-star scatter not just at extremely low metallicities, but over the entire range of [Fe/H].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 66%
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“…This scatter has been found in numerous previous studies, and points towards differences in the formation sites and/or processes involved, if these processes are assumed to be robust and produce similar amounts of heavy elements in each event (see, e.g., Hansen et al 2014). Figure 7 compares the X-Shooter measurements of the [Sr/Fe], [Ba/Fe], and [Ba/Sr] abundance ratios for our programme stars to larger samples with high-resolution determinations from Hansen et al (2012Hansen et al ( , 2015, and Placco et al (2014b). As seen from these figures, the CEMP-no stars follow the general trend of stars without C-enhancement predicted by standard Galactic chemical evolution (GCE) models, while the CEMP-s stars increase the star-to-star scatter not just at extremely low metallicities, but over the entire range of [Fe/H].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 66%
“…Substantial and crucial information can be extracted at intermediate metallicity, where numerous stars of the halo system are found. For example, different r-process sites predict dispersions in stellar abundances of [Sr/H] or [Ba/H], as discussed by Cescutti & Chiappini (2014) and Hansen et al (2012Hansen et al ( , 2014.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This study is based on the analysis of the stellar sample described in Hansen et al (2012). The sample consists of 71 dwarfs and giants, observed with high-resolution spectrographs (UVES/VLT - Dekker et al 2000;and HIRES/KeckVogt et al 1994).…”
Section: Data and Stellar Parametersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Owing to the excellent spectrum quality (a typical signal-to-noise ratio is S/N > 100 at 3200 Å), abundances of Mo I and Ru I could be derived from blue and near-UV spectral lines. Details on data reduction can also be found in Hansen et al (2012).…”
Section: Data and Stellar Parametersmentioning
confidence: 99%
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