1. Improving the [sup 33]S(p,γ)[sup 34]Cl Reaction Rate for Models of Classical Nova Explosions
- Author
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A. Parikh, Th. Faestermann, R. Krücken, V. Bildstein, S. Bishop, K. Eppinger, C. Herlitzius, O. Lepyoshkina, P. Maierbeck, D. Seiler, K. Wimmer, R. Hertenberger, H.-F. Wirth, J. Fallis, U. Hager, D. Hutcheon, Ch. Ruiz, L. Buchmann, D. Ottewell, B. Freeman, Ch. Wrede, A. García, B. Delbridge, A. Knecht, A. Sallaska, A. A. Chen, J. A. Clark, C. M. Deibel, B. Fulton, A. Laird, U. Greife, B. Guo, E. Li, Z. Li, G. Lian, Y. Wang, W. Liu, P. D. Parker, K. Setoodehnia, Paraskevi Demetriou, Rauno Julin, and Sotirios Harissopulos
- Subjects
Physics ,Nuclear reaction ,Massless particle ,Nucleosynthesis ,Helium-3 ,Isotopes of chlorine ,White dwarf ,Astrophysics ,Isotopes of helium ,Abundance of the chemical elements - Abstract
Reduced uncertainty in the thermonuclear rate of the {sup 33}S(p,{gamma}){sup 34}Cl reaction would help to improve our understanding of nucleosynthesis in classical nova explosions. At present, models are generally in concordance with observations that nuclei up to roughly the calcium region may be produced in these explosive phenomena; better knowledge of this rate would help with the quantitative interpretation of nova observations over the S-Ca mass region, and contribute towards the firm establishment of a nucleosynthetic endpoint. As well, models find that the ejecta of nova explosions on massive oxygen-neon white dwarfs may contain as much as 150 times the solar abundance of {sup 33}S. This characteristic isotopic signature of a nova explosion could possibly be observed through the analysis of microscopic grains formed in the environment surrounding a nova and later embedded within primitive meteorites. An improved {sup 33}S(p,{gamma}){sup 34}Cl rate (the principal destruction mechanism for {sup 33}S in novae) would help to ensure a robust model prediction for the amount of {sup 33}S that may be produced. Finally, constraining this rate could confirm or rule out the decay of an isomeric state of {sup 34}Cl(E{sub x} = 146 keV, t{sub 1/2} = 32 m) as a source formore » observable gamma-rays from novae. We have performed several complementary experiments dedicated to improving our knowledge of the {sup 33}S(p,{gamma}){sup 34}Cl rate, using both indirect methods (measurement of the {sup 34}S({sup 3}He,t){sup 34}Cl and {sup 33}S({sup 3}He,d){sup 34}Cl reactions with the Munich Q3D spectrograph) and direct methods (in normal kinematics at CENPA, University of Washington, and in inverse kinematics with the DRAGON recoil mass separator at TRIUMF). Our results will be used with nova models to facilitate comparisons of model predictions with present and future nova observables.« less
- Published
- 2011