15–20 Jun 2025
Girona
Europe/Brussels timezone

Galactic chemical Evolution with short lived radioactive isotopes

19 Jun 2025, 14:45
15m
Girona

Girona

Palau de Congressos de Girona Pg. de la Devesa, 35 17001 Girona
Contributed Talk Galactic Chemical Evolution

Speaker

Benjamin Wehmeyer (University of Wroclaw)

Description

Studying the galactic chemical evolution with short lived radioisotopes (SLRs) has a significant advantage over using stable elements: Due to their radioactive decay, SLRs carry additional timing information on astrophysical nucleosynthesis sites.

We can use meteoritic abundance data in conjunction with a chemical evolution model to constrain the physical conditions in the last rapid neutron capture process event that polluted the early Solar system prior to its formation [1].

Further, with the help of detections of live SLRs of cosmic origin in the deep sea crust [2], we can use these data in a 3-dimensional chemical evolution code to explain why different classes of radioisotopes should often arrive conjointly on Earth, even if they were produced in different sites (e.g., neutron star mergers, core-collapse/thermonuclear supernovae) [3].

Finally, we included radioisotope production into a cosmological zoom-in simulation to create a map of Al-26 decay gamma-rays indicating areas of ongoing star formation in the Galaxy, consistent with the observations by the SPI/INTEGRAL instrument [4].

We further provide predictions for future gamma-ray detection instruments.

References:
[1] Côté et al., 2021 Science 371, 945
[2] Wallner et al., 2021 Science 372, 742W
[3] Wehmeyer et al., 2023 ApJ 944, 121
[4] Kretschmer et al., 2013 A&A 559, A9

Author

Benjamin Wehmeyer (University of Wroclaw)

Co-authors

Dr Andrés Yagüe López (Los Alamos National Laboratory) Dr Benoit Côté (University of Victoria) Prof. Chiaki Kobayashi (University of Hertfordshire) Dr Maria K. Pető (Konkoly Observatory) Dr Maria Lugaro (Konkoly Observatory)

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