3,979 research outputs found
Tables of Nuclear Cross Sections and Reaction Rates: an Addendum to the Paper "Astrophysical Reaction Rates from Statistical Model Calculations"
In a previous publication [Atomic Data and Nuclear Data Tables 75, 1 (2000)],
we had given seven parameter analytical fits to theoretical reaction rates
derived from nuclear cross sections calculated in the statistical model
(Hauser-Feshbach formalism) for targets with 9<Z<84 (Ne to Bi) and for a mass
range reaching the neutron and proton driplines. Reactions considered were
(n,gamma), (n,p), (n,alpha), (p,gamma), (p,alpha), (alpha,gamma), and their
inverse reactions. On public demand, we present here the theoretical nuclear
cross sections and astrophysical reaction rates from which those rate fits were
derived, and we provide these data as on-line electronic files. Corresponding
to the fitted rates, two complete data sets are provided, one of which includes
a phenomenological treatment of shell quenching for neutron-rich nuclei.Comment: 23 pages, 3 tables; scheduled to appear in Atomic Data Nuclear Data
Tables 79 (2001) (September issue); preprint and data also available at
http://quasar.physik.unibas.ch/~tommy/adndt.htm
Global statistical model calculations and the role of isospin
An improved code for the calculation of astrophysical reaction rates in the
statistical model is presented. It includes the possibility to study isospin
effects. Such effects heavily affect capture rates involving self-conjugate
nuclei and may also be found in reactions on other intermediate and heavy
targets.Comment: 5 pages LaTeX, uses iopconf.sty, to appear in the proceedings of the
2nd Oak Ridge Symposium on Atomic and Nuclear Astrophysics, ed. A.
Mezzacappa, IOP, in pres
Radiogenic p-isotopes from type Ia supernova, nuclear physics uncertainties, and galactic chemical evolution compared with values in primitive meteorites
The nucleosynthesis of proton-rich isotopes is calculated for multi-dimensional Chandrasekhar-mass models of Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) with different metallicities. The predicted abundances of the short-lived radioactive isotopes 92Nb, 97, 98Tc, and 146Sm are given in this framework. The abundance seeds are obtained by calculating s-process nucleosynthesis in the material accreted onto a carbon-oxygen white dwarf from a binary companion. A fine grid of s-seeds at different metallicities and 13C-pocket efficiencies is considered. A galactic chemical evolution model is used to predict the contribution of SN Ia to the solar system p-nuclei composition measured in meteorites. Nuclear physics uncertainties are critical to determine the role of SNe Ia in the production of 92Nb and 146Sm. We find that, if standard Chandrasekhar-mass SNe Ia are at least 50% of all SN Ia, they are strong candidates for reproducing the radiogenic p-process signature observed in meteorites.Peer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio
The Karlsruhe Astrophysical Database of Nucleosynthesis in Stars Project - Status and Prospects
The KADoNiS (Karlsruhe Astrophysical Database of Nucleosynthesis in Stars) project is an astrophysical online database for cross sections relevant for nucleosynthesis in the s process and the γ process. The s-process database (http://www.kadonis.org) was started in 2005 and is presently facing its 4th update (KADoNiS v1.0). The γ-process database (KADoNiS-p, http://www.kadonis.org/pprocess) was recently revised and re-launched in March 2013. Both databases are compilations for experimental cross sections with relevance to heavy ion nucleosynthesis. For the s process recommended Maxwellian averaged cross sections for kT=5-100 keV are given for more than 360 isotopes between 1H and 210Bi. For the γ-process database all available experimental data from (p, γ), (p, n), (p, α), (α, γ), (α, n), and (α, p) reactions between 70Ge and 209Bi in or close to the respective Gamow window were collected and can be compared to theoretical predictions. The aim of both databases is a quick and user-friendly access to the available data in the astrophysically relevant energy regions. © 2014 Elsevier Inc.Peer reviewe
Calibration of the ATLAS muonchambers
The high-pressure drift tube chambers for the muon spectrometer of the ATLAS detector at the LHC have to provide a track position resolution of 40~m. The chambers consist of two triple or quadruple layers of drift tubes of 30~mm diameter with a average spatial resolution of 80~m. The precise knowledge of the space-to-drift-time relationship to better than 20~m is mandatory. It has to be recalibrated every few hours during ATLAS data taking using muon tracks from a dedicated data stream. The data of the stream will be processed at three calibration centres such that a new drift chamber calibration will be provided within a few hours after data taking. We shall present the drift-chamber calibration concepts, the key features of the calibration algorithms, and the results of the calibration of cosmic muon data recorded by the ATLAS detector
Measurement of (α,n) reaction cross sections of erbium isotopes for testing astrophysical rate predictions
Date of Acceptance: 30/01/2015The γ-process in core-collapse and/or type Ia supernova explosions is thought to explain the origin of the majority of the so-called p nuclei (the 35 proton-rich isotopes between Se and Hg). Reaction rates for γ-process reaction network studies have to be predicted using Hauser-Feshbach statistical model calculations. Recent investigations have shown problems in the prediction of α-widths at astrophysical energies which are an essential input for the statistical model. It has an impact on the reliability of abundance predictions in the upper mass range of the p nuclei. With the measurement of the 164,166Er(α,n)167,169Yb reaction cross sections at energies close to the astrophysically relevant energy range we tested the recently suggested low energy modification of the α+nucleus optical potential in a mass region where γ-process calculations exhibit an underproduction of the p nuclei. Using the same optical potential for the α-width which was derived from combined 162Er(α,n) and 162Er(α,γ) measurement makes it plausible that a low-energy modification of the optical α+nucleus potential is needed.Peer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio
Testing the role of SNe Ia for galactic chemical evolution of p-nuclei with two-dimensional models and with s-process seeds at different metallicities
Date of Acceptance: 07/11/2014The bulk of p isotopes is created in the "gamma processes" mainly by sequences of photodisintegrations and beta decays in explosive conditions in Type Ia supernovae (SNIa) or in core collapse supernovae (ccSN). The contribution of different stellar sources to the observed distribution of p-nuclei in the solar system is still under debate. We explore single degenerate Type Ia supernovae in the framework of two-dimensional SNIa delayed-detonation explosion models. Travaglio et al. discussed the sensitivity of p-nuclei production to different SNIa models, i.e., delayed detonations of different strength, deflagrations, and the dependence on selected s-process seed distributions. Here we present a detailed study of p-process nucleosynthesis occurring in SNIa with s-process seeds at different metallicities. Based on the delayed-detonation model DDT-a of TRV11, we analyze the dependence of p-nucleosynthesis on the s-seed distribution obtained from different strengths of the 13C pocket. We also demonstrate that 208Pb seed alone changes the p-nuclei production considerably. The heavy-s seeds (140 ≤A < 208) contribute with about 30%-40% to the total light-p nuclei production up to 132Ba (with the exception of 94Mo and 130Ba, to which the heavy-s seeds contribute with about 15% only). Using a Galactic chemical evolution code from Travaglio et al., we study the contribution of SNIa to the solar stable p-nuclei. We find that explosions of Chandrasekhar-mass single degenerate systems produce a large amount of p-nuclei in our Galaxy, both in the range of light (A ≤ 120) and heavy p-nuclei, at almost flat average production factors (within a factor of about three). We discussed in details p-isotopes such as 94Mo with a behavior diverging from the average, which we attribute to uncertainties in the nuclear data or in SNIa modeling. Li et al. find that about 70% of all SNeIa are normal events. If these are explained in the framework of explosions of Chandrasekhar-mass white dwarfs resulting from the single-degenerate progenitor channel, we find that they are responsible for at least 50% of the p-nuclei abundances in the solar system.Peer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio
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.
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