Back to Search Start Over

Catching Element Formation In The Act

Authors :
Fryer, Chris L.
Timmes, Frank
Hungerford, Aimee L.
Couture, Aaron
Adams, Fred
Aoki, Wako
Arcones, Almudena
Arnett, David
Auchettl, Katie
Avila, Melina
Badenes, Carles
Baron, Eddie
Bauswein, Andreas
Beacom, John
Blackmon, Jeff
Blondin, Stephane
Bloser, Peter
Boggs, Steve
Boss, Alan
Brandt, Terri
Bravo, Eduardo
Brown, Ed
Brown, Peter
Budtz-Jorgensen, Steve Bruenn. Carl
Burns, Eric
Calder, Alan
Caputo, Regina
Champagne, Art
Chevalier, Roger
Chieffi, Alessandro
Chipps, Kelly
Cinabro, David
Clarkson, Ondrea
Clayton, Don
Coc, Alain
Connolly, Devin
Conroy, Charlie
Cote, Benoit
Couch, Sean
Dauphas, Nicolas
deBoer, Richard James
Deibel, Catherine
Denisenkov, Pavel
Desch, Steve
Dessart, Luc
Diehl, Roland
Doherty, Carolyn
Dominguez, Inma
Dong, Subo
Dwarkadas, Vikram
Fan, Doreen
Fields, Brian
Fields, Carl
Filippenko, Alex
Fisher, Robert
Foucart, Francois
Fransson, Claes
Frohlich, Carla
Fuller, George
Gibson, Brad
Giryanskaya, Viktoriya
Gorres, Joachim
Goriely, Stephane
Grebenev, Sergei
Grefenstette, Brian
Grohs, Evan
Guillochon, James
Harpole, Alice
Harris, Chelsea
Harris, J. Austin
Harrison, Fiona
Hartmann, Dieter
Hashimoto, Masa-aki
Heger, Alexander
Hernanz, Margarita
Herwig, Falk
Hirschi, Raphael
Hix, Raphael William
Hoflich, Peter
Hoffman, Robert
Holcomb, Cole
Hsiao, Eric
Iliadis, Christian
Janiuk, Agnieszka
Janka, Thomas
Jerkstrand, Anders
Johns, Lucas
Jones, Samuel
Jose, Jordi
Kajino, Toshitaka
Karakas, Amanda
Karpov, Platon
Kasen, Dan
Kierans, Carolyn
Kippen, Marc
Korobkin, Oleg
Kobayashi, Chiaki
Kozma, Cecilia
Krot, Saha
Kumar, Pawan
Kuvvetli, Irfan
Laird, Alison
Laming, Martin
Larsson, Josefin
Lattanzio, John
Lattimer, James
Leising, Mark
Lennarz, Annika
Lentz, Eric
Limongi, Marco
Lippuner, Jonas
Livne, Eli
Lloyd-Ronning, Nicole
Longland, Richard
Lopez, Laura A.
Lugaro, Maria
Lutovinov, Alexander
Madsen, Kristin
Malone, Chris
Matteucci, Francesca
McEnery, Julie
Meisel, Zach
Messer, Bronson
Metzger, Brian
Meyer, Bradley
Meynet, Georges
Mezzacappa, Anthony
Miller, Jonah
Miller, Richard
Milne, Peter
Misch, Wendell
Mitchell, Lee
Mosta, Philipp
Motizuki, Yuko
Muller, Bernhard
Mumpower, Matthew
Murphy, Jeremiah
Nagataki, Shigehiro
Nakar, Ehud
Nomoto, Ken'ichi
Nugent, Peter
Nunes, Filomena
O'Shea, Brian
Oberlack, Uwe
Pain, Steven
Parker, Lucas
Perego, Albino
Pignatari, Marco
Pinedo, Gabriel Martinez
Plewa, Tomasz
Poznanski, Dovi
Priedhorsky, William
Pritychenko, Boris
Radice, David
Ramirez-Ruiz, Enrico
Rauscher, Thomas
Reddy, Sanjay
Rehm, Ernst
Reifarth, Rene
Richman, Debra
Ricker, Paul
Rijal, Nabin
Roberts, Luke
Ropke, Friedrich
Rosswog, Stephan
Ruiter, Ashley J.
Ruiz, Chris
Savin, Daniel Wolf
Schatz, Hendrik
Schneider, Dieter
Schwab, Josiah
Seitenzahl, Ivo
Shen, Ken
Siegert, Thomas
Sim, Stuart
Smith, David
Smith, Karl
Smith, Michael
Sollerman, Jesper
Sprouse, Trevor
Spyrou, Artemis
Starrfield, Sumner
Steiner, Andrew
Strong, Andrew W.
Sukhbold, Tuguldur
Suntzeff, Nick
Surman, Rebecca
Tanimori, Toru
The, Lih-Sin
Thielemann, Friedrich-Karl
Tolstov, Alexey
Tominaga, Nozomu
Tomsick, John
Townsley, Dean
Tsintari, Pelagia
Tsygankov, Sergey
Vartanyan, David
Venters, Tonia
Vestrand, Tom
Vink, Jacco
Waldman, Roni
Wang, Lifang
Wang, Xilu
Warren, MacKenzie
West, Christopher
Wheeler, J. Craig
Wiescher, Michael
Winkler, Christoph
Winter, Lisa
Wolf, Bill
Woolf, Richard
Woosley, Stan
Wu, Jin
Wrede, Chris
Yamada, Shoichi
Young, Patrick
Zegers, Remco
Zingale, Michael
Zwart, Simon Portegies
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Gamma-ray astronomy explores the most energetic photons in nature to address some of the most pressing puzzles in contemporary astrophysics. It encompasses a wide range of objects and phenomena: stars, supernovae, novae, neutron stars, stellar-mass black holes, nucleosynthesis, the interstellar medium, cosmic rays and relativistic-particle acceleration, and the evolution of galaxies. MeV gamma-rays provide a unique probe of nuclear processes in astronomy, directly measuring radioactive decay, nuclear de-excitation, and positron annihilation. The substantial information carried by gamma-ray photons allows us to see deeper into these objects, the bulk of the power is often emitted at gamma-ray energies, and radioactivity provides a natural physical clock that adds unique information. New science will be driven by time-domain population studies at gamma-ray energies. This science is enabled by next-generation gamma-ray instruments with one to two orders of magnitude better sensitivity, larger sky coverage, and faster cadence than all previous gamma-ray instruments. This transformative capability permits: (a) the accurate identification of the gamma-ray emitting objects and correlations with observations taken at other wavelengths and with other messengers; (b) construction of new gamma-ray maps of the Milky Way and other nearby galaxies where extended regions are distinguished from point sources; and (c) considerable serendipitous science of scarce events -- nearby neutron star mergers, for example. Advances in technology push the performance of new gamma-ray instruments to address a wide set of astrophysical questions.<br />Comment: 14 pages including 3 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1902.02915
Document Type :
Working Paper