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We investigate the spallative production of the light elements, Li, Be and B (LiBeB), associated with the evolution of a superbubble (SB) blown by repeated SNe in an OB association. It is shown that if about ten percent of the SN energy can power the acceleration of particles from the material inside the SB, the observed abundances of LiBeB in halo stars, as a function of O, can be explained in a fully consistent way over several decades of metallicity. In this model, the energetic particles (EPs) reflect the SB material, which is a mixing of the ejecta of previous SNe and of the swept-up ISM gas evaporated off the shell. We investigated two different energy spectra for the EPs: the standard cosmic ray source spectrum, or `SNR spectrum, and a specific `SB spectrum, as results from the SB acceleration mechanism of Bykov & Fleishman (1992). While the latter spectrum is more efficient in producing LiBeB, the SNR spectrum can be reconciled with the observational data if an imperfect mixing of the SN ejecta with the rest of the SB material and/or a selective acceleration is invoked (enhancing the C and O abundance amongst the EPs by a factor of ~ 6). One of the main consequences of our model is that the observed linear growth of Be and B abundances as a function of Fe/H expresses a dilution line rather than a continuous, monotonic increase of the metallicity. We propose an observational test of this feature. We also show that the recent 6Li observations in halo stars fit equally well in the framework of the SB model. Finally, we conjecture the existence of two sets of low-metallicity stars, differing in their Be/Fe or B/O abundance ratios, resulting from a `bimodal LiBeB production in the Galaxy, namely from correlated (in SBs) or isolated SN explosions.
Recently models based on the acceleration of metal-rich material inside superbubbles have been proposed to account for the observed abundances of Be and B in metal-poor halo stars. We analyse some of the implications of these models for the distribut
We reassess the problem of the production and evolution of the light elements Li, Be and B and of their isotopes in the Milky Way, in the light of new observational and theoretical developments. The main novelty is the introduction of a new scheme fo
The fast neutrons produced by a calibrated 241Am-Be source were detected by two different Cs2LiYCl6:Ce (CLYC) scintillator detectors. The two cylindrical crystals (1x1 in size) were enriched with more than 99% of 7Li (C7LYC) and with about 95% of 6Li
We investigate the morphology and kinematics of the Galactic spiral structure based on a new sample of O- and early B-type stars. We select 6,858 highly confident OB star candidates from the combined data of the VST Photometric H$alpha$ Survey Data R
We present results from a deep (1 sigma = 5.7 mJy beam^{-1} per 20.8 km s^{-1} velocity channel) ^{12}CO(1-0) interferometric observation of the central 60 region of the nearby edge-on starburst galaxy NGC 2146 observed with the Nobeyama Millimeter A