49 research outputs found
Chaos driven fusion enhancement factor at astrophysical energies
We perform molecular dynamics simulations to assess the screening effects by
bound target electrons in low energy nuclear reactions in laboratories. Quantum
effects corresponding to the Pauli and Heisenberg principle are enforced by
constraints. We show that the enhancement of the average cross section and of
its variance is due to the perturbations induced by the electrons.This gives a
correlation between the maximum amplitudes of the inter-nuclear oscillational
motion and the enhancement factor. It suggests that the chaotic behavior of the
electronic motion affects the magnitude of the enhancement factor.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
Modified Debye-Huckel Electron Shielding and Penetration Factor
Screened potential, modified by non standard electron cloud distributions
responsible for the shielding effect on fusion of reacting nuclei in
astrophysical plasmas, is derived. The case of clouds with depleted tails in
space coordinates is discussed. The modified screened potential is obtained
both from statistical mechanics arguments based on fluctuations of the inverse
of the Debye-Huckel radius and from the solution of a Bernoulli equation used
in generalized statistical mechanics. Plots and tables useful in evaluating
penetration probability at any energy are provided.Comment: 9 pages, 3 figures, 3 table
Role of virtual break-up of projectile in astrophysical fusion reactions
We study the effect of virtual Coulomb break-up, commonly known as the dipole
polarizability, of the deuteron projectile on the astrophysical fusion reaction
3He(d,p)4He. We use the adiabatic approximation to estimate the potential shift
due to the E1 transition to the continuum states in the deuteron, and compute
the barrier penetrability in the WKB approximation. We find that the
enhancement of the penetrability due to the deuteron break-up is too small to
resolve the longstanding puzzle observed in laboratory measurements that the
electron screening effect is surprisingly larger than theoretical prediction
based on an atomic physics model. The effect of the 3He break-up in the
3He(d,p)4He reaction, as well as the 7Li break-up in the 7Li(p,alpha)4He
reaction is also discussed.Comment: 9 pages, 2 eps figure
Variational assimilation of Lagrangian data in oceanography
We consider the assimilation of Lagrangian data into a primitive equations
circulation model of the ocean at basin scale. The Lagrangian data are
positions of floats drifting at fixed depth. We aim at reconstructing the
four-dimensional space-time circulation of the ocean. This problem is solved
using the four-dimensional variational technique and the adjoint method. In
this problem the control vector is chosen as being the initial state of the
dynamical system. The observed variables, namely the positions of the floats,
are expressed as a function of the control vector via a nonlinear observation
operator. This method has been implemented and has the ability to reconstruct
the main patterns of the oceanic circulation. Moreover it is very robust with
respect to increase of time-sampling period of observations. We have run many
twin experiments in order to analyze the sensitivity of our method to the
number of floats, the time-sampling period and the vertical drift level. We
compare also the performances of the Lagrangian method to that of the classical
Eulerian one. Finally we study the impact of errors on observations.Comment: 31 page
Screening of Nuclear Reactions in the Sun and Solar Neutrinos
We quantitatively determine the effect and the uncertainty on solar neutrino
production arising from the screening process. We present predictions for the
solar neutrino fluxes and signals obtained with different screening models
available in the literature and by using our stellar evolution code. We explain
these numerical results in terms of simple laws relating the screening factors
with the neutrino fluxes. Futhermore we explore a wider range of models for
screening, obtained from the Mitler model by introducing and varying two
phenomenological parameters, taking into account effects not included in the
Mitler prescription. Screening implies, with respect to a no-screening case, a
central temperat reduction of 0.5%, a 2% (8%) increase of Beryllium
(Boron)-neutrino flux and a 2% (12%) increase of the Gallium (Chlorine) signal.
We also find that uncertainties due to the screening effect ar at the level of
1% for the predicted Beryllium-neutrino flux and Gallium signal, not exceeding
3% for the Boron-neutrino flux and the Chlorine signal.Comment: postscript file 11 pages + 4 figures compressed and uuencoded we have
replaced the previous paper with a uuencoded file (the text is the same) for
any problem please write to [email protected]
Radiation correction to astrophysical fusion reactions and the electron screening problem
We discuss the effect of electromagnetic environment on laboratory
measurements of the nuclear fusion reactions of astrophysical interest. The
radiation field is eliminated using the path integral formalism in order to
obtain the influence functional, which we evaluate in the semi-classical
approximation. We show that enhancement of the tunneling probability due to the
radiation correction is extremely small and does not resolve the longstanding
problem that the observed electron screening effect is significantly larger
than theoretical predictions.Comment: 9 pages, 1 eps figure
The Cross Section of 3He(3He,2p)4He measured at Solar Energies
We report on the results of the \hethet\ experiment at the underground
accelerator facility LUNA (Gran Sasso). For the first time the lowest
projectile energies utilized for the cross section measurement correspond to
energies below the center of the solar Gamow peak (=22 keV). The
data provide no evidence for the existence of a hypothetical resonance in the
energy range investigated. Although no extrapolation is needed anymore (except
for energies at the low-energy tail of the Gamow peak), the data must be
corrected for the effects of electron screening, clearly observed the first
time for the \hethet\ reaction. The effects are however larger than expected
and not understood, leading presently to the largest uncertainty on the quoted
value for bare nuclides (=5.40 MeV b).Comment: 18 pages, 10 postscript figures, Calculations concerning hypothetical
resonanz added, Submitted to Phys. Rev. C., available at this URL:
HTTP://www.lngs.infn.it/lngs/htexts/luna/luna.htm
First measurement of the 14N(p,gamma)15O cross section down to 70 keV
In stars with temperatures above 20*10^6 K, hydrogen burning is dominated by
the CNO cycle. Its rate is determined by the slowest process, the
14N(p,gamma)15O reaction. Deep underground in Italy's Gran Sasso laboratory, at
the LUNA 400 kV accelerator, the cross section of this reaction has been
measured at energies much lower than ever achieved before. Using a windowless
gas target and a 4pi BGO summing detector, direct cross section data has been
obtained down to 70 keV, reaching a value of 0.24 picobarn. The Gamow peak has
been covered by experimental data for several scenarios of stable and explosive
hydrogen burning. In addition, the strength of the 259 keV resonance has been
remeasured. The thermonuclear reaction rate has been calculated for
temperatures 90 - 300 *10^6 K, for the first time with negligible impact from
extrapolations
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Enhanced ion acceleration from transparency-driven foils demonstrated at two ultraintense laser facilities
Laser-driven ion sources are a rapidly developing technology producing high energy, high peak current beams. Their suitability for applications, such as compact medical accelerators, motivates development of robust acceleration schemes using widely available repetitive ultraintense femtosecond lasers. These applications not only require high beam energy, but also place demanding requirements on the source stability and controllability. This can be seriously affected by the laser temporal contrast, precluding the replication of ion acceleration performance on independent laser systems with otherwise similar parameters. Here, we present the experimental generation of >60âMeV protons and >30âMeVâu-1 carbon ions from sub-micrometre thickness Formvar foils irradiated with laser intensities >1021 Wcm2. Ions are accelerated by an extreme localised space charge field âł30âTVm-1, over a million times higher than used in conventional accelerators. The field is formed by a rapid expulsion of electrons from the target bulk due to relativistically induced transparency, in which relativistic corrections to the refractive index enables laser transmission through normally opaque plasma. We replicate the mechanism on two different laser facilities and show that the optimum target thickness decreases with improved laser contrast due to reduced pre-expansion. Our demonstration that energetic ions can be accelerated by this mechanism at different contrast levels relaxes laser requirements and indicates interaction parameters for realising application-specific beam delivery
LUNA: a Laboratory for Underground Nuclear Astrophysics
It is in the nature of astrophysics that many of the processes and objects
one tries to understand are physically inaccessible. Thus, it is important that
those aspects that can be studied in the laboratory be rather well understood.
One such aspect are the nuclear fusion reactions, which are at the heart of
nuclear astrophysics. They influence sensitively the nucleosynthesis of the
elements in the earliest stages of the universe and in all the objects formed
thereafter, and control the associated energy generation, neutrino luminosity,
and evolution of stars. We review an experimental approach for the study of
nuclear fusion reactions based on an underground accelerator laboratory, named
LUNA.Comment: Invited Review; accepted for publication in Reports on Progress in
Physics; 26 pages; 27 figure