Measuring the <sup>13</sup>C(d,n)<sup>14</sup>N Cross Section—A Prominent Beam-Induced Background Reaction in Underground Nuclear Astrophysics Experiments
ORAL
Abstract
The 13C(α,n)16O reaction is the primary source of neutrons for the main branch of the slow neutron capture process (s-process) of nucleosynthesis. Direct measurement of the cross section within the Gamow window is difficult due to low yields. Prior measurements have constrained the 13C(α,n)16O cross section down to 279 keV, but with large statistical uncertainties. These uncertainties, compounded by the unknown influence of a 1/2+ resonance in 17O near the α-capture threshold, make extrapolation into the Gamow window unreliable, necessitating additional measurements at low energies. Measurement is further complicated by beam-induced background from the 13C(d,n)14N reaction, resulting from deuterium contamination in the α-particle beams of most accelerators. At astrophysical energies, the 13C(d,n)14N cross section is many orders of magnitude greater than that of 13C(α,n)16O. Thus, a direct measurement of 13C(d,n)14N in the energy range of interest is needed. The 13C(d,n)14N cross section was accordingly measured at laboratory energies between 165 and 250 keV at Oak Ridge National Laboratory’s Multicharged Ion Research Facility. Preliminary results are discussed.
*This work was supported in part by the U.S. Department of Energy and the National Science Foundation.
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Presenters
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Chad C Ummel
- Rutgers University
- Rutgers Univ