The observation of 26Al gives us the proof of active nucleosynthesis in
the Milky Way. However the identification of the main producers of 26Al is
still a matter of debate. Many sites have been proposed, but our poor knowledge
of the nuclear processes involved introduces high uncertainties. In particular,
the limited accuracy on the 25Mg(α,n)28Si reaction cross
section has been identified as the main source of nuclear uncertainty in the
production of 26Al in C/Ne explosive burning in massive stars, which has
been suggested to be the main source of 26Al in the Galaxy. We studied
this reaction through neutron spectroscopy at the CN Van de Graaff accelerator
of the Legnaro National Laboratories. Thanks to this technique we are able to
discriminate the (α,n) events from possible contamination arising from
parasitic reactions. In particular, we measured the neutron angular
distributions at 5 different beam energies (between 3 and 5 MeV) in the
\ang{17.5}-\ang{106} laboratory system angular range. The presented results
disagree with the assumptions introduced in the analysis of a previous
experiment.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures - accepted by EPJ