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Using TAS Analysis to Contrain I(?) values for <sup>51</sup>Fe and <sup>60</sup>Ga

ORAL

Abstract

Accreting neutron stars provide insight into the behavior of ultra dense, cold matter where quantum effects are present. Hydrogen and helium build up on the surface, until the rise in temperature and density reach thermonuclear runaway, which can result in a Type I X-ray burst (XRB). The nuclear burning that occurs is called the rapid proton capture (rp-) process. Abundance outputs of astrophysical models of XRBs depend on many nuclear reaction rates. 59Cu(p,γ) is an important reaction to ascertain if the rp-process stays in the Ni-Cu cycle or if the process moves to a higher atomic mass. The reaction rate has a strong effect on the light curves of XRBs; therefore, it needs to be constrained to improve comparisons between models and observations. These reaction rates cannot be measured directly, they are determined using experimental inputs for Hauser-Feshbach calculations. These inputs will be constrained using the β-Oslo technique; a method that has proven useful on neutron rich nuclei. To benchmark this method for ?+ decays, total absorption spectroscopy was used to study the β+ decay of 51Fe and 60Ga. TAS measurements were used to extract I(?) values for both nuclei. In this presentation, the first results of the TAS analysis will be discussed.

Presenters

  • Jordan J Owens-Fryar

    Facility for Rare Isotope Beams, Michigan State University

Authors

  • Jordan J Owens-Fryar

    Facility for Rare Isotope Beams, Michigan State University

  • Stephanie M Lyons

    Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, Michigan State University, NSCL Michigan State University, Pacific Northwest National Lab, Pacific Northwestern National Laboratory, FRIB

  • Andrea L Richard

    Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, NSCL Michigan State University, Lawrence Livermore National Lab

  • Z. P Meisel

    Ohio University

  • Artemis Spyrou

    Michigan State University

  • Hannah C. C Berg

    FRIB

  • K. H Brandenburg

    Ohio University

  • Aaron Chester

    Michigan State University, Simon Fraser University

  • Katie Childers

    Nevada National Security Site, FRIB

  • Paul A Deyoung

    Hope College

  • Erin C Good

    FRIB

  • Caley Harris

    Michigan State University, Michigan State University (MSU), FRIB

  • Alicia Palmisano

    UTK, University of Tennessee Knoxville

  • M. Saxena

    Ohio University

  • S. K Subedi

    Ohio University

  • Artemis Tsantiri

    Michigan State University