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Nucleosynthesis and stellar evolution

Date Issued
2002-01-01
Author(s)
Thielemann, FK  
Argast, D
Brachwitz, F
Martinez-Pinedo, G
Rauscher, T  
Liebendorfer, M
Mezzacappa, A
Hoflich, P
Nomoto, K
DOI
10.1023/a:1019543110473
Abstract
Two of the basic building blocks of galaxies are stars and the interstellar medium. The evolution of the abundance composition in the latter and especially the enrichment of heavy elements as a function of space and time reflects in turn the history of star formation and the lifetimes of the diverse contributing stellar objects. Therefore, the understanding of stellar evolution and its endpoints (mainly planetary nebulae, supernovae of type Ia and type II/Ib/Ic) is essential. Despite many efforts, a full and self-consistent understanding of supernovae (the main contributors to nucleosynthesis in galaxies) is not existing, yet. However, they leave fingerprints, seen either in spectra, lightcurves, radioactivities/decay gamma-rays or in galactic evolution. Here we want to address the composition of ejecta, their model uncertainties and relate them to constraints from abundance observations in galactic evolution.
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