Meteoritic Stardust and the Presolar History of the Solar Neighborhood
2016
PROCEEDINGS OF THE 14TH INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON NUCLEI IN THE COSMOS (NIC2016)
DOI
10.7566/JPSCP.14.010301
Presolar stardust is present at low levels in meteorites and cometary dust and identified as ancient stellar matter by unusual isotopic compositions reflecting nuclear processes in stellar interiors and galactic chemical evolution. Most grains originated in winds from asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars and supernova and their isotopic compositions provide important constraints on models of evolution and nucleosynthesis in these environments. The presolar grains from AGB stars appear to have formed in a lower-mass population of stars than predicted by GCE models. A merger of the Milky Way with a dwarf galaxy some 1Gyr before the birth of the Solar System may explain this and other grain observations and the data thus can provide a unique window into the presolar history of the solar neighborhood.