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White paper on nuclear astrophysics and low energy nuclear physics Part 1: Nuclear astrophysics

Authors :
Sanjay Reddy
Michael Scott Smith
Brian W. O'Shea
Falk Herwig
Remco Zegers
J. C. Blackmon
R. E. Rutledge
D. W. Bardayan
Madappa Prakash
Francis Timmes
Arthur E Champagne
Timothy C. Beers
Pawel Danielewicz
Boris Pritychenko
Gail C. McLaughlin
Filomena Nunes
Brian D. Fields
Dean M. Townsley
Anthony Mezzacappa
Almudena Arcones
Mounib El-Eid
Grigory Rogachev
Jutta Escher
Roland Diehl
Bronson Messer
Hendrik Schatz
B. Alex Brown
L. A. Bernstein
Michael Zingale
Christian Iliadis
William Raphael Hix
Andrew W. Steiner
Carl R. Brune
Aaron Couture
Tod E. Strohmayer
Michael Wiescher
Ernst Rehm
Carla Fröhlich
Edward F. Brown
Alessandro Chieffi
Bradley S. Meyer
W. G. Lynch
Ingrid H. Stairs
Source :
Progress in Particle and Nuclear Physics. 94:1-67
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2017.

Abstract

This white paper informs the nuclear astrophysics community and funding agencies about the scientific directions and priorities of the field and provides input from this community for the 2015 Nuclear Science Long Range Plan. It summarizes the outcome of the nuclear astrophysics town meeting that was held on August 21–23, 2014 in College Station at the campus of Texas A&M University in preparation of the NSAC Nuclear Science Long Range Plan. It also reflects the outcome of an earlier town meeting of the nuclear astrophysics community organized by the Joint Institute for Nuclear Astrophysics (JINA) on October 9–10, 2012 Detroit, Michigan, with the purpose of developing a vision for nuclear astrophysics in light of the recent NRC decadal surveys in nuclear physics (NP2010) and astronomy (ASTRO2010). The white paper is furthermore informed by the town meeting of the Association of Research at University Nuclear Accelerators (ARUNA) that took place at the University of Notre Dame on June 12–13, 2014. In summary we find that nuclear astrophysics is a modern and vibrant field addressing fundamental science questions at the intersection of nuclear physics and astrophysics. These questions relate to the origin of the elements, the nuclear engines that drive life and death of stars, and the properties of dense matter. A broad range of nuclear accelerator facilities, astronomical observatories, theory efforts, and computational capabilities are needed. With the developments outlined in this white paper, answers to long standing key questions are well within reach in the coming decade.

Details

ISSN :
01466410
Volume :
94
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Progress in Particle and Nuclear Physics
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........49f92daaaee858e5965d117849b8d5d9