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Revised rates for the stellar triple-aprocess from measurement of12C nuclear resonances.

Authors :
Fynbo, Hans O. U.
Diget, Christian Aa.
Bergmann, Uffe C.
Borge, Maria J. G.
Cederkäll, Joakim
Dendooven, Peter
Fraile, Luis M.
Franchoo, Serge
Fedosseev, Valentin N.
Fulton, Brian R.
Huang, Wenxue
Huikari, Jussi
Jeppesen, Henrik B.
Jokinen, Ari S.
Jones, Peter
Jonson, Björn
Köster, Ulli
Langanke, Karlheinz
Meister, Mikael
Nilsson, Thomas
Source :
Nature; 1/13/2005, Vol. 433 Issue 7022, p136-139, 4p, 5 Graphs
Publication Year :
2005

Abstract

In the centres of stars where the temperature is high enough, threea-particles (helium nuclei) are able to combine to form<superscript>12</superscript>C because of a resonant reaction leading to a nuclear excited state. (Stars with masses greater than~0.5 times that of the Sun will at some point in their lives have a central temperature high enough for this reaction to proceed.) Although the reaction rate is of critical significance for determining elemental abundances in the Universe, and for determining the size of the iron core of a star just before it goes supernova, it has hitherto been insufficiently determined. Here we report a measurement of the inverse process, where a<superscript>12</superscript>C nucleus decays to threea-particles. We find a dominant resonance at an energy of~11?MeV, but do not confirm the presence of a resonance at 9.1?MeV (ref. 3). We show that interference between two resonances has important effects on our measured spectrum. Using these data, we calculate the triple-arate for temperatures from 10<superscript>7</superscript>?K to 10<superscript>10</superscript>?K and find significant deviations from the standard rates. Our rate below~5×10<superscript>7</superscript>?K is higher than the previous standard, implying that the critical amounts of carbon that catalysed hydrogen burning in the first stars are produced twice as fast as previously believed. At temperatures above 10<superscript>9</superscript>?K, our rate is much less, which modifies predicted nucleosynthesis in supernovae. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836
Volume :
433
Issue :
7022
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
15643637
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/nature03219