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A nearby neutron-star merger explains the actinide abundances in the early Solar System

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  • Imre Bartos

    (University of Florida)

  • Szabolcs Marka

    (Columbia University in the City of New York)

Abstract

A growing body of evidence indicates that binary neutron-star mergers are the primary origin of heavy elements produced exclusively through rapid neutron capture1–4 (the ‘r-process’). As neutron-star mergers occur infrequently, their deposition of radioactive isotopes into the pre-solar nebula could have been dominated by a few nearby events. Although short-lived r-process isotopes—with half-lives shorter than 100 million years—are no longer present in the Solar System, their abundances in the early Solar System are known because their daughter products were preserved in high-temperature condensates found in meteorites5. Here we report that abundances of short-lived r-process isotopes in the early Solar System point to their origin in neutron-star mergers, and indicate substantial deposition by a single nearby merger event. By comparing numerical simulations with the early Solar System abundance ratios of actinides produced exclusively through the r-process, we constrain the rate of occurrence of their Galactic production sites to within about 1−100 per million years. This is consistent with observational estimates of neutron-star merger rates6–8, but rules out supernovae and stellar sources. We further find that there was probably a single nearby merger that produced much of the curium and a substantial fraction of the plutonium present in the early Solar System. Such an event may have occurred about 300 parsecs away from the pre-solar nebula, approximately 80 million years before the formation of the Solar System.

Suggested Citation

  • Imre Bartos & Szabolcs Marka, 2019. "A nearby neutron-star merger explains the actinide abundances in the early Solar System," Nature, Nature, vol. 569(7754), pages 85-88, May.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:nature:v:569:y:2019:i:7754:d:10.1038_s41586-019-1113-7
    DOI: 10.1038/s41586-019-1113-7
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