University of Pennsylvania Physics & Astronomy Colloquium

From Mergers to Magnetars: Quest for the Origin of the Heaviest Elements

Roughly half of the elements heavier than iron in the universe are forged in extreme, neutron-rich environments where nuclei capture neutrons faster than they can undergo beta decay—the so-called r-process. The discovery of "kilonova" emission following the gravitational wave event GW170817 established binary neutron star mergers as an important r-process site, but several observations suggest that additional sources may be required, particularly to explain the abundances of low-metallicity stars.

In neutron star mergers, heavy elements form in outflows from the accretion disk that feeds the newly formed black hole. Broadly similar neutron-rich accretion flows are created in "collapsars"—the explosions of massive, rotating stars.  Particularly massive collapsar disks can become gravitationally unstable and fragment, forming swarms of low-mass neutron stars that coalesce via gravitational waves hierarchically within the same disk environment, potentially triggering a "multi messenger symphony".  The recent discovery of candidate sub-solar mass neutron star merger events by LIGO/Virgo in association with supernovae may support this scenario. 

A different pathway to heavy-element nucleosynthesis arises in the giant flares from highly magnetized neutron stars (magnetars), where crustal material can be ejected into space.  I will present evidence, in the form of a previously unexplained MeV gamma-ray signal, that the famous Galactic magnetar giant flare from December 2004 synthesized ~1e-6 solar masses of r-process nuclei.  Radioactive decay of these ejecta also powers a very short-lived (~minutes) UV/optical transient—a “mini-kilonova”, which could be detected following extragalactic flares with upcoming missions such as ULTRASAT and UVEX. 

Date & Time

March 04, 2026 | 3:30pm – 4:30pm
Add to calendar 03/04/2026 15:30 03/04/2026 16:30 University of Pennsylvania Physics & Astronomy Colloquium use-title Topic: From Mergers to Magnetars: Quest for the Origin of the Heaviest Elements Speakers: Brian David Metzger , Columbia University & Flatiron Institute More: https://www.ias.edu/sns/events/university-pennsylvania-physics-astronomy-colloquium-27 Roughly half of the elements heavier than iron in the universe are forged in extreme, neutron-rich environments where nuclei capture neutrons faster than they can undergo beta decay—the so-called r-process. The discovery of "kilonova" emission following the gravitational wave event GW170817 established binary neutron star mergers as an important r-process site, but several observations suggest that additional sources may be required, particularly to explain the abundances of low-metallicity stars. In neutron star mergers, heavy elements form in outflows from the accretion disk that feeds the newly formed black hole. Broadly similar neutron-rich accretion flows are created in "collapsars"—the explosions of massive, rotating stars.  Particularly massive collapsar disks can become gravitationally unstable and fragment, forming swarms of low-mass neutron stars that coalesce via gravitational waves hierarchically within the same disk environment, potentially triggering a "multi messenger symphony".  The recent discovery of candidate sub-solar mass neutron star merger events by LIGO/Virgo in association with supernovae may support this scenario.  A different pathway to heavy-element nucleosynthesis arises in the giant flares from highly magnetized neutron stars (magnetars), where crustal material can be ejected into space.  I will present evidence, in the form of a previously unexplained MeV gamma-ray signal, that the famous Galactic magnetar giant flare from December 2004 synthesized ~1e-6 solar masses of r-process nuclei.  Radioactive decay of these ejecta also powers a very short-lived (~minutes) UV/optical transient—a “mini-kilonova”, which could be detected following extragalactic flares with upcoming missions such as ULTRASAT and UVEX.  David Rittenhouse Laboratory Room A4, University of Pennsylvania a7a99c3d46944b65a08073518d638c23

Location

David Rittenhouse Laboratory Room A4, University of Pennsylvania

Speakers

Brian David Metzger , Columbia University & Flatiron Institute