Collapsar disk outflows II: Heavy element production
We investigate nucleosynthesis in the sub-relativistic outflows from black hole (BH) accretion disks formed in failed supernovae from rapidly-rotating Wolf-Rayet stars. These disks reach the neutrino-cooled regime during a portion of their evolution, undergoing significant neutronization and thus ha...
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Zusammenfassung: | We investigate nucleosynthesis in the sub-relativistic outflows from black
hole (BH) accretion disks formed in failed supernovae from rapidly-rotating
Wolf-Rayet stars. These disks reach the neutrino-cooled regime during a portion
of their evolution, undergoing significant neutronization and thus having the
potential to support the $r$-process. Here, we analyze the formation of heavy
elements in the ejecta from global, axisymmetric, long-term, viscous
hydrodynamic simulations of these systems that include neutrino emission and
absorption, Newtonian self-gravity, a pseudo-Newtonian potential for the BH
gravity, and a 19-isotope nuclear network. Tracer particles are used for
post-processing with a larger network. In addition to analyzing models from a
previous paper, we present new models in which we modify the rotation profile
of the progenitor star, to maximize neutrino reprocessing of circularized mass
shells. All of our models produce several $M_\odot$ of O, followed by about a
solar mass of C, Ne, and Ni, with other alpha elements produced in smaller
quantities. Only one of our models, with the lowest viscosity, yields
significant amounts of first $r$-process peak elements, with negligible yields
at higher nuclear masses. The rest of the set, including models with a modified
rotation profile, produces very small or negligible quantities of elements
beyond the iron group. Models that produce the heaviest elements (up to
$A\sim200$) do so along the proton-rich side of the valley of stability at high
entropy ($s/k_B\sim80$), pointing to the $rp$-process as a mechanism that
operates in collapsars. The absence of neutron-rich ejecta proves to be
insensitive to changes in the rotation profile of the star, suggesting that
heavy $r$-process elements are difficult to produce in collapsars if no
large-scale poloidal magnetic field is present in the disk to drive outflows
during neutronization. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2408.15338 |