40 research outputs found
The Importance of Parity-Dependence of the Nuclear Level Density in the Prediction of Astrophysical Reaction Rates
A simple description for obtaining the parity distribution of nuclear levels
in the pf + g9/2 shell as a function of excitation energy was recently derived.
We implement this in a global nuclear level density model. In the framework of
the statistical model, cross sections and astrophysical reaction rates are
calculated in the Fe region and compared to rates obtained with the common
assumption of an equal distribution of parities. We find considerable
differences, especially for reactions involving particles in the exit channel.Comment: 4 pages, to appear in the proceedings of CGS11 (Prague), World
Scientifi
Parity-Dependence in the Nuclear Level Density
Astrophysical reaction rates are sensitive to the parity distribution at low
excitation energies. We combine a formula for the energy-dependent parity
distribution with a microscopic-macroscopic nuclear level density. This
approach describes well the transition from low excitation energies, where a
single parity dominates, to high excitations where the two densities are equal.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures; contribution to Nuclei In The Cosmos VIII, to
appear in Nucl. Phys.
Large-scale prediction of the parity distribution in the nuclear level density and application to astrophysical reaction rates
A generalized method to calculate the excitation-energy dependent parity ratio in the nuclear level density is presented, using the assumption of Poisson distributed independent quasi particles combined with BCS occupation numbers. It is found that it is crucial to employ a sufficiently large model space to allow excitations both from low-lying shells and to higher shells beyond a single major shell. Parity ratios are only found to equilibrate above at least 5-10 MeV of excitation energy. Furthermore, an overshooting effect close to major shells is found where the parity opposite to the ground state parity may dominate across a range of several MeV before the parity ratio finally equilibrates. The method is suited for large-scale calculations as needed, for example, in astrophysical applications. Parity distributions were computed for all nuclei from the proton dripline to the neutron dripline and from Ne up to Bi. These results were then used to recalculate astrophysical reaction rates in a Hauser-Feshbach statistical model. Although certain transitions can be considerably enhanced or suppressed, the impact on astrophysically relevant reactions remains limited, mainly due to the thermal population of target states in stellar reaction rates.Peer reviewe
Astrophysical Rates for Explosive Nucleosynthesis: Stellar and Laboratory Rates for Exotic Nuclei
A selected overview of stellar effects and reaction mechanisms with relevance
to the prediction of astrophysical reaction rates far off stability is
provided.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures (contining 2 subfigures each); Proceedings of 10th
Intl. Conference on Nucleus-Nucleus Collisions, Beijing, China, August 2009;
to appear in Nuclear Physics
Nucleosynthesis in neutrino heated matter: The vp-process and the r-process
This manuscript reviews recent progress in our understanding of the
nucleosynthesis of medium and heavy elements in supernovae. Recent
hydrodynamical models of core-collapse supernovae show that a large amount of
proton rich matter is ejected under strong neutrino fluxes. This matter
constitutes the site of the vp-process where antineutrino absorption reactions
catalyze the nucleosynthesis of nuclei with A > 64. Supernovae are also
associated with the r-process responsible for the synthesis of the heaviest
elements in nature. Fission during the r-process can play a major role in
determining the final abundance patter and in explaining the almost universal
features seen in metal-poor r-process-rich stars.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, invited talk at NIC-IX, International Symposium
on Nuclear Astrophysics - Nuclei in the Cosmos - IX, CERN, Geneva,
Switzerland, 25-30 June, 200
Low-lying dipole response in the Relativistic Quasiparticle Time Blocking Approximation and its influence on neutron capture cross sections
We have computed dipole strength distributions for nickel and tin isotopes
within the Relativistic Quasiparticle Time Blocking approximation (RQTBA).
These calculations provide a good description of data, including the
neutron-rich tin isotopes Sn. The resulting dipole strengths have
been implemented in Hauser-Feshbach calculations of astrophysical neutron
capture rates relevant for r-process nucleosynthesis studies. The RQTBA
calculations show the presence of enhanced dipole strength at energies around
the neutron threshold for neutron rich nuclei. The computed neutron capture
rates are sensitive to the fine structure of the low lying dipole strength,
which emphasizes the importance of a reliable knowledge of this excitation
mode.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, Accepted in Nucl. Phys.
Evolution and Nucleosynthesis of Massive Stars and Related Nuclear Uncertainties
Properties of atomic nuclei important for the prediction of astrophysical
reaction rates are reviewed. In the first part, a recent simulation of
evolution and nucleosynthesis of stars between 15 and 25 solar masses is
presented. This study is used to illustrate the required nuclear input as well
as to give examples of the sensitivity to certain rates. The second part
focusses on the prediction of nuclear rates in the statistical model
(Hauser-Feshbach) and direct capture (DWBA). Some of the important ingredients
are addressed. Discussed in more detail are approaches to predict level
densities, parity distributions, and optical alpha+nucleus potentials.Comment: Invited talk at 17th Int. Nucl. Phys. Conf. of the EPS "Nuclear
Physics in Astrophysics", Debrecen, Hungary, 2002 (new version: fixed typo in
alpha potential parameters; note: the parameters are incorrect in the NPA
paper
Correlated Strength in Nuclear Spectral Function
We have carried out an (e,e'p) experiment at high momentum transfer and in
parallel kinematics to measure the strength of the nuclear spectral function
S(k,E) at high nucleon momenta k and large removal energies E. This strength is
related to the presence of short-range and tensor correlations, and was known
hitherto only indirectly and with considerable uncertainty from the lack of
strength in the independent-particle region. This experiment confirms by direct
measurement the correlated strength predicted by theory.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, accepted by Phys. Rev. Let
The Nuclear Reaction Network WinNet
© 2023. The Author(s). Published by the American Astronomical Society. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY), https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/We present the state-of-the-art single-zone nuclear reaction network WinNet, which is capable of calculating the nucleosynthetic yields of a large variety of astrophysical environments and conditions. This ranges from the calculation of the primordial nucleosynthesis, where only a few nuclei are considered, to the ejecta of neutron star mergers with several thousands of involved nuclei. Here we describe the underlying physics and implementation details of the reaction network. We additionally present the numerical implementation of two different integration methods, the implicit Euler method and Gears method, along with their advantages and disadvantages. We furthermore describe basic example cases of thermodynamic conditions that we provide together with the network and demonstrate the reliability of the code by using simple test cases. With this publication, WinNet will be publicly available and open source at GitHub and Zenodo.Peer reviewe
Improved predictions of nuclear reaction rates with the TALYS reaction code for astrophysical applications
Nuclear reaction rates of astrophysical applications are traditionally
determined on the basis of Hauser-Feshbach reaction codes. These codes adopt a
number of approximations that have never been tested, such as a simplified
width fluctuation correction, the neglect of delayed or multiple-particle
emission during the electromagnetic decay cascade, or the absence of the
pre-equilibrium contribution at increasing incident energies.
The reaction code TALYS has been recently updated to estimate the
Maxwellian-averaged reaction rates that are of astrophysical relevance. These
new developments enable the reaction rates to be calculated with increased
accuracy and reliability and the approximations of previous codes to be
investigated.
The TALYS predictions for the thermonuclear rates of relevance to
astrophysics are detailed and compared with those derived by widely-used codes
for the same nuclear ingredients. It is shown that TALYS predictions may differ
significantly from those of previous codes, in particular for nuclei for which
no or little nuclear data is available. The pre-equilibrium process is shown to
influence the astrophysics rates of exotic neutron-rich nuclei significantly.
For the first time, the Maxwellian-averaged (n,2n) reaction rate is calculated
for all nuclei and its competition with the radiative capture rate is
discussed.
The TALYS code provides a new tool to estimate all nuclear reaction rates of
relevance to astrophysics with improved accuracy and reliability.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures. Papers accepted for publication in A&A Journa
