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X-ray burst studies with the JENSA gas jet target

Authors :
Uwe Greife
Sunghoon Ahn
Michael Scott Smith
K. Y. Chae
Antonios Kontos
Steven D. Pain
Paul J. Thompson
Jolie Cizewski
Ulrike Hager
Jacob Allen
Orlando Gomez
K. L. Jones
D. W. Bardayan
Nata Franco Soares de Bem
A. Lepailleur
Wei Jia Ong
Milan Matos
Rebecca Toomey
Sara Ayoub
Hendrik Schatz
Alison Sachs
Patrick O'Malley
Fernando Montes
Eric Deleeuw
Justin Browne
D. Blankstein
J. C. Blackmon
David Walter
L. E. Linhardt
R. L. Kozub
Zach Meisel
Eunji Lee
Karl Smith
Kelly Chipps
Soomi Cha
Catherine Deibel
Konrad Schmidt
Kyle Schmitt
M. R. Hall
Source :
EPJ Web of Conferences, Vol 165, p 01043 (2017)
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
EDP Sciences, 2017.

Abstract

When a neutron star accretes hydrogen and helium from the outer layers of its companion star, thermonuclear burning enables the α p-process as a break out mechanism from the hot CNO cycle. Model calculations predict ( α , p) reaction rates significantly affect both the light curves and elemental abundances in the burst ashes. The Jet Experiments in Nuclear Structure and Astrophysics (JENSA) gas jet target enables the direct measurement of previously inaccessible ( α ,p) reactions with radioactive beams provided by the rare isotope re-accelerator ReA3 at the National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory (NSCL), USA. JENSA is going to be the main target for the Recoil Separator for Capture Reactions (SECAR) at the Facility for Rare Isotope Beams (FRIB). Commissioning of JENSA and first experiments at Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) showed a highly localized, pure gas target with a density of ∼10 19 atoms per square centimeter. Preliminary results are presented from the first direct cross section measurement of the 34 Ar( α , p) 37 K reaction at NSCL.

Details

Language :
English
Volume :
165
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
EPJ Web of Conferences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c68d51d7c09ca6348311651b84e06d95