26–30 May 2026
The Hagerty Center, Traverse City, Michigan, USA
US/Eastern timezone

Galactic chemical Evolution with short lived radioactive isotopes

27 May 2026, 10:00
20m
The Hagerty Center, Traverse City, Michigan, USA

The Hagerty Center, Traverse City, Michigan, USA

Contributed talk (15min + 5min Q&A) Morning I

Speaker

Dr 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 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

Career stage Pre-tenure/untenured mid-to-late-career researcher

Author

Dr Benjamin Wehmeyer (University of Wroclaw)

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