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Α - capture reactions using the 4π γ-summing technique Α. Lagoyannis Institute of Nuclear Physics, N.C.S.R. “Demokritos”

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Presentation on theme: "Α - capture reactions using the 4π γ-summing technique Α. Lagoyannis Institute of Nuclear Physics, N.C.S.R. “Demokritos”"— Presentation transcript:

1 α - capture reactions using the 4π γ-summing technique Α. Lagoyannis Institute of Nuclear Physics, N.C.S.R. “Demokritos”

2 1.The problem 2.Ways of coping with the problem 3.The 4π γ - summing technique 4.Results 5.Conclusions Outline

3 - + Pathways for heavy-element nucleosynthesis   100 yr   10 8 n/cm 3   1 sec   10 20 n/cm 3

4 S. Galanopoulos et al., Phys. Rev. C 67, 015801 (2003) Woosley and Howard, Ap. J. Suppl. 36, 285 (1978) S. Goriely et al., A&A 375, 35 (2001) abundances p nuclei and p-nuclei abundances

5 Initial “stellar” conditions Key reactions 22 Ne( ,n) 25 Mg 12 C( ,  ) 16 O ………… seed abundances s process Reaction network p-nuclei abundances p process Almost 2000 nuclei are involved in this network powered by more than 20000 reactions ( ,n), ( ,p), ( ,  ), n-, p-,  -captures,  -decays, e-captures  a huge number of cross sections have to be known HAUSER-FESHBACH THEORY is required ! Reaction network HAUSER-FESHBACH THEORY Optical Model Potentials - Nuclear Level Densities γ-ray strength functions - Masses (32≤Z≤83, 36≤N≤131) NEED FOR GLOBAL MODELS OF OMP, NLD, …

6 CN reaction: a + A  C *  B * + b entrance channel α exit channel β TRANSMISSION COEFFICIENTS When CN is excited to “continuum”then Ts have to be averaged Nuclear Level Density (NLD) γ Emission is described by the Giant Dipole Resonance γ-ray strength functions Ts are calculated by γ-ray strength functions Optical Model Potentials (OMP) Particle emission Ts are calculated by Optical Model Potentials (OMP) Cross section calculations using the HF theory

7 Input parameters in HF calculations up to 2 orders of magnitude up to 40%3-5 %

8 r:= max. / min. M. Arnould and S. Goriely, Phys. Rep. 384, 1 (2003) n captures p captures α captures A≈100 A≈180 obtained with 14 different sets of nuclear ingredients (OMP, NLD, …) in HF calculations. Demetriou, Grama, Goriely, Nucl. Phys. A 707, 253 (2002) Impact of nuclear physics uncertainties on p-nuclei abundances

9 charged-particle induced reactions reaction barrier (MeV) E 0 (keV) T (K) p + p (sun) 0.555.91.5×10 7  + 12 C (red giants) 300561.5×10 8 12 C + 12 C (massive stars) 10.441500≈ 1×10 9 p + 74 Se (p process) 7.92800≈ 3×10 9 (p,γ) reactions: E CM = 1 – 5 MeV (α,γ) reactions: E CM = 6–12 MeV Gamow peaks and windows: the astrophysically relevant energies OUR GOAL To measure the cross section σ at these energy regions

10 Direct experimental techniques ActivationAngular Distribution 4π γ – summing method

11 MINIBALL @ IKP/Cologne γ angular distribution measurements: the (α,γ) problem (p,γ) reactions: E CM = 1 – 5 MeV, σ = 1 μb ÷ 1 mb (α,γ) reactions: E CM = 6–12 MeV, σ = 0.1 ÷100 μb (p,γ) reactions: NO PROBLEM TO MEASURE (α,γ) reactions: MAJOR PROBLEMS WITH BEAM-INDUCED BACKGROUND

12 The 4π γ-summing method: The principle

13 The 4π γ-summing method: The setup @ DTL-Bochum@ INP-Demokritos

14 12 C(α,α) 12 C NaI + n 27 Αl(n,γ) 28 Al α + 92 Μο beam-induced bgd sum peak sum peaks 10.6 E α =11 MeV 10.2 9.8 92 Mo(α,γ) 96 Ru Ε α = 6 – 12 MeV ξ=398 μgr/cm 2 Solutions (up to now): Theoretical calculations Simulation No “real” experimental solution The 4π γ-summing method: The 92 Mo(α,γ) 96 Ru example   =(Y/  )*(1/  )*(A/N A ) BUT  =ƒ(E,M)

15 pos. a pos. b pos. c The 4π γ-summing method: Efficiency calculation I in/out ratios: M=1  R = 2 M=2  R = 2 × 2 = 4 M=3  R = 2 × 2 × 2 = 8 M=4  R = 2 × 2 × 2 × 2 = 16

16 The 4π γ-summing method: Efficiency calculation II ε 0, α and b vary for even-even, odd-even and odd-odd compound nucleus 12 odd-odd compound nucleus even-even compound nucleus odd-even compound nucleus

17 The 4π γ-summing method: Efficiency check with known reactions

18 (α,γ) results: Comparison with theory Proposed reactions: 68 Zn(α,γ) 72 Ge 86 Sr(α,γ) 90 Zr 90 Zr(α,γ) 94 Mo 94 Mo(α,γ) 98 Ru 116 Sn(α,γ) 120 Te

19 Imag. part W : Woods-Saxon type Volume + Surface Volume + Surface (ratio, damping C) geometry: r W, a W Fermi-type energy dependence of imaginary potential depth fitted to el. scattering + reaction data at E< 20 MeV U = V c + V + iW + ΔV Real part V : double-folding method effective NN interaction: M3Y -density dependent (Kobos et al, 1984) projectile density: n/p densities from elastic scattering data target density: Hartree-Fock theory Correction ∆V : dispersive relations Nucl. Phys. A. 707, 253 (2002) DG 2 : a global α – optical model potential

20 Alpha-particle capture reaction cross-section systematics (α,γ) cross section data: 10 isotopes Summary The global  -potential of Demetriou, Grama, Goriely seems to be working well in mass region A ≤ 100. However very few data exist in higher mass regions where uncertainties are large. But from experimental point of view such measurements are very challenging: need high current α beams + target development + efficient γ - arrays. Perspectives: Explore the unstable mass regions using RIB’s

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