Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1870091 Physics Procedia 2015 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

Classical novae are common thermonuclear explosions in the Milky Way galaxy, occurring on the surfaces of white-dwarf stars that are accreting hydrogen-rich material from companion stars. Nucleosynthesis in classical novae depends on radiative proton-capture reaction rates on radioactive nuclides. Many of these reactions cannot be measured directly at current accelerator facilities due to the lack of intense, high-quality, radioactive-ion beams at the relevant energies. Since most of these reactions proceed via resonant capture, their rates can be determined indirectly by measuring the properties of the resonances. At the National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory, we have used the β-delayed γ decays of 26P and 31Cl to populate resonances in 26Si and 31S and study the radiative proton captures on 25Al and 30P, respectively. These were two out of the three most important nuclear-physics uncertainties associated with the observable products of nova nucleosynthesis. The 26P experiment has enabled a more accurate estimate of the nova contribution to the long-lived Galactic 26Al detected with γ-ray telescopes. The 31Cl experiment, currently under analysis, will calibrate potential nova thermometers and mixing meters based on elemental abundance ratios, and facilitate the identification of pre-solar nova grain candidates found in primitive meteorites based on isotopic ratios.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Physics and Astronomy Physics and Astronomy (General)