A modified Brink-Axel hypothesis for astrophysical Gamow-Teller transitions

ORAL

Abstract

Weak interaction charged current transition strengths from highly excited nuclear states are fundamental ingredients for accurate modeling of compact object composition and dynamics, but are difficult to obtain either from experiment or theory. For lack of alternatives, calculations have often fallen back upon a generalized Brink-Axel hypothesis, that is, assuming the strength function (transition probability) is independent of the initial nuclear state but depends only upon the transition energy and the weak interaction properties of the parent nucleus ground state. Here is presented numerical evidence for a modified `local' Brink-Axel hypothesis for Gamow-Teller transitions for pf-shell nuclei relevant to astrophysical applications. Specifically, while the original Brink-Axel hypothesis does not hold globally, strength functions from initial states nearby inenergy are similar within statistical fluctuations. This agrees with previous work on strength function moments. Using this modified hypothesis, one can tackle strength functions at previously intractable initial energies, using semi-converged initial states at arbitrary excitation energy. This work provides a well-founded method for computing accurate thermal weak transition rates for medium-mass nuclei at temperatures occurring in stellar cores near collapse.

*This material is based upon work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Nuclear Physics, under Award Number DE-FG02-03ER41272, NSF Grant No. PHY-1914242 at UCSD and the NSF N3AS Physics Frontier Center, NSF Grant No. PHY-2020275, and the Heising-Simons Foundation (2017-228).

Publication: Phys. Rev. C 105, 015801 (2022)

Presenters

  • Calvin W Johnson

    • San Diego State University

Authors

  • Calvin W Johnson

    • San Diego State University
  • Raul A Herrera

    • UCSD and SDSU
  • George M Fuller

    • University of California, San Diego