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Commissioning of the SECAR recoil separator

ORAL

Abstract

Stellar explosions such as novae, supernovae, and X-ray bursts involve thermonuclear reactions on rare isotopes. Interpretation of observations such as the light curves, elemental abundances, or γ-rays from nuclear decay as well as predictions of nucleosynthesis are notably impacted by large uncertainties in the nuclear reaction rates. Many of these reactions either have no experimental data available or have only been constrained indirectly.

The SECAR (SEparator for CApture Reactions) recoil separator, recently commissioned at the Facility for Rare Isotope Beams (FRIB), enables direct measurements of the relevant proton- and α-capture reactions. SECAR takes advantage of radioactive beams produced by FRIB via projectile fragmentation, which are then stopped, and reaccelerated to astrophysical energies at the ReA3 facility. Reactions are studied in inverse kinematics by impinging the beam on a H or He target in gaseous or solid form. The reaction recoils are counted at SECAR, where a sequence of magnets and velocity filters separate them from the unreacted beam.

I will present the astrophysical motivation for SECAR's development and the results from measurements that were performed with SECAR during commissioning in 2021.

Presenters

  • Ruchi Garg

    Michigan State University

Authors

  • Ruchi Garg

    Michigan State University

  • Georg P Berg

    University of Notre Dame

  • Jeffery C Blackmon

    Louisiana State University

  • Kelly A Chipps

    ORNL

  • Manoel Couder

    University of Notre Dame

  • Catherine M Deibel

    Louisiana State University

  • Nikolaos Dimitrakopoulos

    Central Michigan University

  • Uwe Greife

    Colorado School of Mines

  • Ashley A Hood

    Texas A&M University

  • Rahul Jain

    Michigan State University

  • Caleb A Marshall

    Ohio University

  • Z. P Meisel

    Ohio University

  • Sara Ayoub Miskovich

    SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

  • Fernando Montes

    Michigan State University, Facility for Rare Isotope Beams

  • Georgios Perdikakis

    Central Michigan University

  • Thomas J Ruland

    Louisiana State University

  • Hendrik Schatz

    Michigan State University

  • Kiana Setoodehnia

    Michigan state University, FRIB, Facility for Rare Isotopes Beams, Facility for Rare Isotope Beams

  • Michael S Smith

    Oak Ridge National Lab

  • Pelagia Tsintari

    Central Michigan University

  • Louis Wagner

    Michigan State University