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Appendix 5 - Galactic evolution

Michel Cassé
Affiliation:
Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris
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Summary

Chemical evolution of galaxies

The key word in modern theory is ‘evolution’. The impressive consistency of the astronuclear view of the heavens has established the idea of an evolution of nuclear species which has the same significance for astrophysics as the evolution of living species for biology. It is itself preceded by an evolution of particle or corpuscular species, which would have been very short, lasting less than 1 second. This process was of a quite crucial nature in determining the components available to build up atoms, that is, those stable particles, protons and neutrons, that serve as the building-blocks, and the forces that bind them together.

Once the elementary particles are produced, nuclear evolution precedes and determines all others, including geological and biological evolution, and its main agent is the stars. There are four main arguments to support the idea of a stellar genealogy for atomic matter. These can be described as the poverty of the ancients, the evolutionary trail, the great galactic cycle, and stellar alchemy. They are not independent of one another. Quite the contrary, they are very deeply related through the dialectic between big and small, astronomical and nuclear.

Note that I do not say ‘infinitely small’, for there are things smaller than atomic nuclei, namely elementary particles. There are also things larger than the astronomical scale of stars and galaxies that concerns us here.

Type
Chapter
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Stellar Alchemy
The Celestial Origin of Atoms
, pp. 224 - 229
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2003

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