Logo del repository
  1. Home
 
Opzioni

A census of the Sun’s ancestors and their contributions to the Solar System chemical composition

Fiore, F.
•
Matteucci, F.
•
Spitoni, E.
altro
Vasini, A.
2024
  • journal article

Periodico
ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Abstract
In this work, we compute the rates and numbers of different types of stars and phenomena (supernovae, novae, white dwarfs, merging neutron stars, black holes) that contributed to the chemical composition of the Solar System. During the Big Bang, only light elements formed, while all the heavy ones, from carbon to uranium and beyond, have since been created inside stars. Stars die and release the newly formed elements into the interstellar gas. This process is called ‘chemical evolution’. In particular, we analyse the death rates of stars of all masses, whether they die quiescently or explosively. These rates and total star numbers are computed in the context of a revised version of the two-infall model for the chemical evolution of the Milky Way, which reproduces the observed abundance patterns of several chemical species, the global solar metallicity, and the current gas, stellar, and total surface mass densities relatively well. We also compute the total number of stars ever born and still alive as well as the number of stars born up to the formation of the Solar System with mass and metallicity like those of the Sun. This latter number accounts for all the possible existing Solar systems that can host life in the solar vicinity. We conclude that, among all the stars (from 0.8 to 100 M⊙) that were born and died from the Big Bang up until the Solar System formation epoch and that contributed to its chemical composition, 93.00% were stars that died as single white dwarfs (without interacting significantly with a companion star) and originated in the mass range of 0.8–8 Mo, while 5.24% were neutron stars and 0.73% were black holes, both originating from core-collapse supernovae (M > 8 Mo); 0.64% were Type Ia supernovae and 0.40% were nova systems, both originating from the same mass range as the white dwarfs. The number of stars similar to the Sun born from the Big Bang up until the formation of the Solar System, with metallicity in the range 12+log(Fe/H)= 7.50 ± 0.04 dex, is ~31•107, and in particular our Sun is the ~2.61• 107-th star of this kind.
DOI
10.1051/0004-6361/202451076
WOS
WOS:001345759900031
Archivio
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11767/143591
info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/scopus/2-s2.0-85208284792
https://arxiv.org/abs/2406.08036
https://ricerca.unityfvg.it/handle/20.500.11767/143591
Diritti
open access
Soggetti
  • ISM: abundance

  • Galaxy: abundance

  • Galaxy: disk

  • Galaxy: evolution

  • solar neighborhood

  • Settore PHYS-05/A - A...

google-scholar
Get Involved!
  • Source Code
  • Documentation
  • Slack Channel
Make it your own

DSpace-CRIS can be extensively configured to meet your needs. Decide which information need to be collected and available with fine-grained security. Start updating the theme to match your nstitution's web identity.

Need professional help?

The original creators of DSpace-CRIS at 4Science can take your project to the next level, get in touch!

Realizzato con Software DSpace-CRIS - Estensione mantenuta e ottimizzata da 4Science

  • Impostazioni dei cookie
  • Informativa sulla privacy
  • Accordo con l'utente finale
  • Invia il tuo Feedback