15–20 Sept 2024
TU Dresden, Germany; Barkhausen-Bau, Schönfeld-Hörsaal (BAR/SCHÖ/E)
Europe/Berlin timezone
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Constraining the Astrophysical $\gamma$ Process: Cross Section Measurements of (p,$\gamma$) Reactions in Inverse Kinematics

16 Sept 2024, 18:25
1m
Schönfeld-Hörsaal BAR/SCHÖ/E (TU Dresden, Germany; Barkhausen-Bau, Schönfeld-Hörsaal (BAR/SCHÖ/E))

Schönfeld-Hörsaal BAR/SCHÖ/E

TU Dresden, Germany; Barkhausen-Bau, Schönfeld-Hörsaal (BAR/SCHÖ/E)

Helmholtzstraße 18 01069 Dresden Germany

Speaker

Artemis Tsantiri (Facility for Rare Isotope Beams / Michigan State University)

Description

Heavy element nucleosynthesis is largely governed by $n$-capture processes. However, a group of neutron-deficient isotopes, the $p$ nuclei, cannot be formed by any of those processes. These $\sim30$ nuclei are believed to be formed in the $\gamma$ process through a sequence of photodisintegration reactions on preexisting $r$- and $s$-process seeds. Reproducing the solar $p$-nuclei abundances using nuclear reaction networks requires input on a vast network of mostly radioactive isotopes. As experimental cross sections of $\gamma$-process reactions are almost entirely unknown, the related reaction rates are based on Hauser-Feshbach calculations and therefore carry large uncertainties. Therefore, it is crucial to develop techniques to measure these important reactions within the astrophysically relevant Gamow window with radioactive beams. The SuN group at FRIB has been developing such a program for the past decade.
This work focuses on two of the first measurements of $(\mathrm{p},\gamma)$ reactions in inverse kinematics with this setup, namely the ${}^{82}\mathrm{Kr}(\mathrm{p},\gamma){}^{83}\mathrm{Rb}$ with a stable beam, and the ${}^{73}\mathrm{As}(\mathrm{p},\gamma){}^{74}\mathrm{Se}$ reaction in our first radioactive beam experiment. Specifically, the latter reaction is found to be of significant importance to the final abundance of the lightest $p$-nucleus, ${}^{74}\mathrm{Se}$, as the inverse reaction ${}^{74}\mathrm{Se}(\gamma,\mathrm{p}){}^{73}\mathrm{As}$ is the main destruction mechanism of $^{74}\mathrm{Se}$.

Primary author

Artemis Tsantiri (Facility for Rare Isotope Beams / Michigan State University)

Co-authors

Artemis Spyrou (Michigan State University) Alicia Palmisano (University of Tennessee Knoxville) G. Balk (Hope College) Hannah Berg (Michigan State University) Jessica Berkman (Michigan State University) Konstantinos Bosmpotinis (Michigan State University) C. Dembski (University of Notre Dame) Paul DeYoung (Hope College) N. Dimitrakopoulos (Central Michigan University) A. C. Dombos (University of Notre Dame) Amelia Doetsch (Michigan State University) Tawfik Gaballah (Mississippi State University) R. Garg (Facility for Rare Isotope Beams / Michigan State University) Erin Good (Pacific Northwest National Laboratory) Caley Harris (Michigan State University) R. Jain (Facility for Rare Isotope Beams / Michigan State University) Sean Liddick (Michigan State University) Rebeka Lubna (Facility for Rare Isotope Beams) Stephanie Lyons (Pacific Northwest National Laboratory) Mejdi Mogannam (Michigan State University) B. Monteagudo (Hope College) F. Montes (NSCL) G. Ogudoro (Hope College) Jordan Owens-Fryar (Michigan State University) J. Pereira (NSCL) Andrea Richard (Ohio University) Eleanor Ronning (Michigan State University/FRIB) H. Schatz (NSCL) A. Simon (University of Notre Dame) M. K. Smith (Facility for Rare Isotope Beams / Michigan State University) M. Smith (Michigan State University) C. Tinson (Michigan State University) P. Tsintari (Central Michigan University) Sivihami Uthayakumaar (Facility for Rare Isotope Beams) R. G. T. Zegers (NSCL)

Presentation materials