Publications by authors named "John J Cowan"

Article Synopsis
  • The heaviest chemical elements are formed during extreme cosmic events like neutron star mergers or supernovae through a process called the rapid neutron-capture process (-process).
  • The production of elements heavier than uranium is not fully understood and relies on theoretical models rather than experimental data.
  • Researchers found a correlation in the abundances of certain elements (ruthenium to silver) with heavier elements but none with adjacent lighter ones, suggesting that these transuranic nuclei may contribute to element formation in these cosmic events.
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The development of tunable dye lasers and a simple atomic and ionic beam source for all elements were critical in establishing a reliable absolute scale for atomic transition probabilities in the optical to near UV regions. The laboratory astrophysics program at the University of Wisconsin - Madison (UW) concentrates on neutral and singly-ionized species transitions that are observable in astronomical spectra of cool stars, emphasizing the rare earth -capture elements and the Fe-group elements that are important inputs to early Galactic nucleosynthesis studies. The UW program is one of several productive efforts on atomic transition probabilities.

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The first stars in the Universe were probably quite different from those born today. Composed almost entirely of hydrogen and helium (plus a tiny trace of lithium), they lacked the heavier elements that determine the formation and evolution of younger stars. Although we cannot observe the very first stars--they died long ago in supernovae explosions--they created heavy elements that were incorporated into the next generation.

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We review the origin and evolution of the heavy elements, those with atomic numbers greater than 30, in the early history of the Milky Way. There is a large star-to-star bulk scatter in the concentrations of heavy elements with respect to the lighter metals, which suggests an early chemically unmixed and inhomogeneous Galaxy. The relative abundance patterns among the heavy elements are often very different from the solar system mix, revealing the characteristics of the first element donors in the Galaxy.

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