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Reaction rates in the Laboratory

Reaction rates in the Laboratory. Example I: 14 N(p, g ) 15 O. slowest reaction in the CNO cycle Controls duration of hydrogen burning Determines main sequence turnoff – glob. cluster ages. stable target  can be measured directly:. g -ray detectors. Accelerator. vacuum beam line.

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Reaction rates in the Laboratory

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  1. Reaction rates in the Laboratory Example I:14N(p,g)15O • slowest reaction in the CNO cycle • Controls duration of hydrogen burning • Determines main sequence turnoff – glob. cluster ages • stable target  can be measured directly: g-ray detectors Accelerator vacuum beam line N-target Proton beam • but cross sections are extremely low: •  Measure as low an energy as possible – then extrapolate to Gamow window

  2. Calculating experimental event rates and yields beam of particles hits target at rest area A j,v thickness d assume thin target (unattenuated beam intensity throughout target) Reaction rate (per target nucleus): Total reaction rate (reactions per second) with nT: number density of target nucleiI=jA : beam number current (number of particles per second hitting the target) note: dnTis number of target nuclei per cm2. Often the target thickness is specified in these terms.

  3. Events detected in experiment per second Rdet e is the detection efficiency and can accounts for: • detector efficiency (fraction of particles hitting a detector that produce a signal that is registered) • solid angle limitations • absorption losses in materials • energy losses that cause particles energies to slide below a detection threshold • …

  4. 14N(p,g) level scheme Gamow window0.1 GK: 91-97 keV g-signature of resonance6791 keV g0 Direct gs capture~7297 keV + Ep

  5. LUNALaboratory Underground for Nuclear Astrophysics(Transparencies: F. Strieder http://www.jinaweb.org/events/tucson/Talk_Strieder.pdf) Gran Sasso Mountain scheme 1:1 Mio cosmic ray suppression

  6. Spectra: above and under ground

  7. Beschleuniger bild

  8. Setup picture

  9. Spectrum overall

  10. Spectrum blowup

  11. Results: GamowWindow Formicola et al. PLB 591 (2004) 61 New S(0)=1.7 +- 0.2 keVb (NACRE: 3.2 +- 0.8)

  12. New Resonance ? Resonance claim and TUNL disproof

  13. Effect that speculative resonance would have had

  14. Example II: 21Na(p,g)22Mg problem: 21Na is unstable (half-life 22.5 s) solution: radioactive beam experiment in inverse kinematics: 21Na + p  22Mg + g thick 21Na production target hydrogen target 22Mg products Accelerator I Accelerator 2 p beam 21Na beam g-detectors ionsource particleidentification difficulty: beam intensity typically 107-11 1/s (compare with 100 mA protons = 6x1014/s)  so far only succeeded in 2 cases: 13N(p,g) at Louvain la Neuve and 21Na(p,g) in TRIUMF (for capture reaction)

  15. DRAGON @ TRIUMF

  16. Results Result for 206 keV resonance: S. Bishop et al. Phys. Rev. Lett. 90 (2003) 2501

  17. Example III: 32Cl(p,g)33Ar Shell model calculations Herndl et al. Phys. Rev. C 52(1995)1078  proton width strongly energy dependent rate strongly resonance energy dependent

  18. H. Schatz NSCL Coupled Cyclotron Facility

  19. Installation of D4 steel, Jul/2000

  20. Fast radioactive beams at the NSCL: • low beam intensities • Impure, mixed beams • high energies (80-100 MeV per nucleon) (astrophysical rates at 1-2 MeV per nucleon)  great for indirect techniques • Coulomb breakup • Transfer reactions • Decay studies • …

  21. H. Schatz Setup Focal plane:identify 33Ar S800 Spectrometer at NSCL: 34Ar Beamblocker 33Ar 33Arexcited 34Ar d Plastic People: Plastictarget 34Ar D. Bazin R. Clement A. Cole A. Gade T. Glasmacher B. Lynch W. Mueller H. Schatz B. Sherrill M. VanGoethem M. Wallace Radioactive 34Ar beam84 MeV/u T1/2=844 ms(from 150 MeV/u 36Ar) SEGAGe array(18 Detectors)

  22. S800 Spectrometer SEGA Ge-array

  23. H. Schatz with experimental data shell model only x 3 uncertainty x10000 uncertainty New 32Cl(p,g)33Ar rate – Clement et al. PRL 92 (2004) 2502 Doppler corrected g-rays in coincidence with 33Ar in S800 focal plane: g-rays from predicted 3.97 MeV state stellar reaction rate reaction rate (cm3/s/mole) 33Ar level energies measured: 3819(4) keV (150 keV below SM) 3456(6) keV (104 keV below SM) temperature (GK) Typical X-ray burst temperatures

  24. NSCL Plans: facility for reaccelerated low energy beams • Low energy area • 0.15-3 MeV/u • gas jet target • recoil separator • special g and particle detection systems • High energy area • would also be used by astrophysics community • probably in line with needs of nuclear physics community Strawman layout created before workshop – space requirement confirmed, did not discuss details

  25. Science with CCF reaccelerated beams and p-process … Rates in pps >108 direct (p,g) 107-8 106-7 direct (p,a) or (a,p)transfer 105-6 104-5 (p,p), some transfer 102-4 Up to here: For indirect measurements: many For direct measurements: some important rates • Capabilities: • sufficient beam intensities for many important measurements • all beams available once system commissioned • probably very good beam purity • none of the measurements identified can be performed at another facility as of now

  26. Future ISF Upgrade Options

  27. Upgrade Option 1: ISF NSCL-Site Upgrade Detail Trapping, Laser Spectroscopy Coupling Line from K1200 to Linac Sweeper MoNA Cyc-Stopper, LE Separator Reaccelerator(12 MeV/nucleon) SEE-Line RF Fragment Separator S800 Low Energy Arena ReconfiguredA1900 Space for Front End Linac Production Target Linac Tunnel

  28. Science with reaccelerated beams at future ISF facility Direct measurementsfor many (a,g) reactions in p-process Rates in pps 10>10 109-10 108-9 107-8 All reaction rates can beindirectly measuredincluding 72Kr waiting point 106-7 105-6 104-5 102-4 most reaction rates up to ~Sr can bedirectly measured All reaction rates up to ~Ti can be directly measured  Very strong nuclear astrophysics science case

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