Stellar -process neutron capture cross sections on determined via activation, atom trap trace analysis, and decay counting

  • M. Tessler
  • , J. Zappala
  • , S. Cristallo
  • , L. Roberti
  • , M. Paul
  • , S. Halfon
  • , T. Heftrich
  • , W. Jiang
  • , D. Kijel
  • , A. Kreisel
  • , M. Limongi
  • , Z. T. Lu
  • , P. Müller
  • , R. Purtschert
  • , R. Reifarth
  • , A. Shor
  • , D. Veltum
  • , D. Vescovi
  • , M. Weigand
  • , L. Weissman

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

8 Scopus citations

Abstract

We present a detailed account of neutron capture experiments of astrophysical relevance on reactions at the border between weak and main process. The experiments were performed with quasi-Maxwellian neutrons from the Liquid-Lithium Target (LiLiT) and the mA-proton beam at 1.93 MeV (2-3 kW) of the Soreq Applied Research Accelerator Facility (SARAF). The setup yields high-intensity keV quasi-Maxwellian neutrons (3-5 /s) closely reproducing the conditions of -process stellar nucleosynthesis. A sample of 100 mg of atmospheric, pre-nuclear-age Kr gas contained in a Ti spherical shell was activated in the LiLiT neutron field. The abundances of long-lived Kr isotopes () were measured by atom counting via atom trap trace analysis (ATTA) at Argonne National Laboratory and low-level counting (LLC) at University of Bern. This work is the first measurement of a nuclear cross section using atom counting via ATTA. The activities of short-lived Kr isotopes () were measured by -decay counting with a high-purity germanium detector. Maxwellian-averaged cross sections for -process thermal energies are extracted. By comparison to reference values, our nucleosynthesis network calculations show that the experimental cross sections have a strong impact on calculated abundances of krypton and neighboring nuclides, in some cases improving agreement between theory and observations.

Original languageEnglish
Article number015806
JournalPhysical Review C
Volume104
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jul 2021

Bibliographical note

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© 2021 American Physical Society

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