Constraining stellar electron-capture rates.

ORAL

Abstract

Electron-capture (EC) rates play a key role in various astrophysical phenomena, such as core-collapse supernovae (CCSN), cooling of the neutron star crust, and nucleosynthesis in thermonuclear supernovae. The stellar conditions cannot be reproduced in the laboratory and to estimate the EC rates at extreme thermodynamic conditions one has to rely on theoretical models. Previous studies show the importance of temperature-dependent effects for stellar EC calculations on few nuclei near N=50. The effects of the temperature on EC rates have been further investigated recently, based on shell model and QRPA calculations, for nuclei that play an important role during the collapse phase of (CCSN) (N≈50, Z≳28). In addition, to quantify the impact of the new temperature-dependent calculations on the dynamics of the collapse, numerical simulations of CCSN were performed with the spherically-symmetric GR1D simulation code.

Besides, the theoretical models must be benchmarked with experimental data where available, i.e. primarily from the ground state of the parent nucleus. Over the past decades, great progress has been made to constrain electron-capture rates on stable nuclei by using reactions in forward kinematics. However, the unstable neutron-rich nuclei capturing the most during, for example, the core-collapse supernovae, remained inaccessible. The use of the (d,2He) charge-exchange reaction in inverse kinematics with the Active-Target Time-Projection Chamber and the S800 Spectrograph was developed at NSCL/FRIB, for extracting Gamow-Teller strengths in the β+ direction on unstable nuclei. This makes it possible, for the first time, to constrain electron-capture rates on neutron-rich nuclei.

Recent results of the temperature-dependent EC rates study on N=50 nuclei and of the pilot 14O(d,2He) experiment will be presented.

*This work is supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant PHY-193247145, "Windows on the Universe: Nuclear Astrophysics at the NSCL".

Presenters

  • Simon Giraud

    • FRIB/NSCL

Authors

  • Simon Giraud

    • FRIB/NSCL
  • Remco G Zegers

    • Michigan State University
  • Juan C Zamora

    • FRIB/NSCL
    • NSCL-FRIB
  • Zarif Rahman

    • Michigan State University
  • Miles DeNudt

    • Michigan State University
  • Daniel Bazin

    • Michigan State University
    • NSCL Michigan State University
    • FRIB
  • Yassid Ayyad

    • University of Santiago de Compostela
    • IGFAE
    • Universidade de Santiago de Compostela
  • Saul Beceiro-Novo

    • Michigan State University
    • FRIB/NSCL
    • NSCL/FRIB
  • Jie Chen

    • Argonne National Laboratory
  • Marco Cortesi

    • NSCL Cyclotron Lab
  • Cavan Maher

    • Michigan State University
  • Wolfgang Mittig

    • Michigan State University
    • FRIB/NSCL
    • NSCL-FRIB
  • Felix Ndayisabye

    • Michigan State University
  • Shumpei Noji

    • Michigan State University
  • Jorge Pereira

    • Michigan State University
  • Jaclyn M Schmitt

    • Michigan State University
  • Michael M Serikow

    • Facility for Rare Isotope Beams
    • Michigan State University
  • Jason Surbrook

    • Michigan State University
  • Lijie Sun

    • Michigan State University
  • Nathan Watwood

    • NSCL/FRIB
    • FRIB/NSCL
    • Michigan State University
  • Tyler Wheeler

    • Michigan State University
  • Evan M Ney

    • University of North Carolina Chapel Hill
    • The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
  • Ante Ravlić

    • University of Zagreb