In the centres of stars where the temperature is high enough, three alpha-particles (helium nuclei) are able to combine to form 12C because of a resonant reaction leading to a nuclear excited state. (Stars with masses greater than approximately 0.5 times that of the Sun will at some point in their lives have a central temperature high enough for this reaction to proceed.) Although the reaction rate is of critical significance for determining elemental abundances in the Universe, and for determining the size of the iron core of a star just before it goes supernova, it has hitherto been insufficiently determined. Here we report a measurement of the inverse process, where a 12C nucleus decays to three alpha-particles. We find a dominant resonance at an energy of approximately 11 MeV, but do not confirm the presence of a resonance at 9.1 MeV (ref. 3). We show that interference between two resonances has important effects on our measured spectrum. Using these data, we calculate the triple-alpha rate for temperatures from 10(7) K to 10(10) K and find significant deviations from the standard rates. Our rate below approximately 5 x 10(7) K is higher than the previous standard, implying that the critical amounts of carbon that catalysed hydrogen burning in the first stars are produced twice as fast as previously believed. At temperatures above 10(9) K, our rate is much less, which modifies predicted nucleosynthesis in supernovae.
Collisions induced by 9;10;11 Be on a 64 Zn target at the same c.m. energy were studied. For the first time, strong effects of the 11 Be halo structure on elastic-scattering and reaction mechanisms at energies near the Coulomb barrier are evidenced experimentally. The elastic-scattering cross section of the 11 Be halo nucleus shows unusual behavior in the Coulomb-nuclear interference peak angular region. The extracted total-reaction cross section for the 11 Be collision is more than double the ones measured in the collisions induced by 9;10 Be. It is shown that such a strong enhancement of the total-reaction cross section with 11 Be is due to transfer and breakup processes. A hundred years after Rutherford's scattering experiment [1], heavy-ion-elastic-scattering angular distributions (AD) are usually plotted as a ratio of the Rutherford cross section (i.e., pure Coulomb scattering). Such representation usually shows a decrease of the elastic cross section with the angle due to absorption at small impact parameters by nonelastic processes, and an oscillatory behavior. The latter, using the language of optics, is described in terms of refraction by nonabsorbing lenses (Coulomb rainbow model) or diffraction by sharp-edged, nonrefracting apertures (Fraunhofer or Fresnel diffraction model). However, the refraction or diffraction descriptions are oversimplifications of the realistic process; rather, the nucleus behaves as a ''cloudy crystal ball.'' The elasticscattering AD may show a peak resulting from the interference between the Coulomb and nuclear amplitudes (Coulomb-nuclear interference peak) [2], which, in analogy with the Coulomb rainbow model, is sometimes called the rainbow peak. Since elastic scattering is a peripheral process, it does not give information on the interior region of nuclei. It probes the tail of the wave function, and hence one can learn about surface properties, such as size of nuclei and surface diffuseness. Therefore, elastic scattering is an ideal tool to study peculiar nuclear structures as, for example, the nuclear halo. Such structure originates when very weakly bound nucleon(s) can tunnel into the classically forbidden region, giving rise to a diffuse tail surrounding a well-bound core. The behavior of the system in nuclear reactions is mostly determined by the tail of the wave function [3]. The reaction mechanisms may also be affected by the weak binding: at energies around the Coulomb barrier, couplings between the entrance channel and the continuum [4][5][6][7][8], as well as to the various reaction channels [9][10][11][12], are expected to be very important. Direct reactions, such as breakup or transfer, may be favored owing to the low binding energy, the extended tail of halo nuclei, and the large Q values for selected transfer channels.Almost all elastic-scattering and reaction mechanism studies around the barrier with halo nuclei have been performed with the 2n halo nucleus 6 He. All authors agree that, due to the 6 He structure, one has an enhancement of the total-reaction (T...
In this paper details of the experimental procedure and data analysis of the collision of 11 Be+ 64 Zn around the Coulomb barrier are described and discussed in the framework of different theoretical approaches. In a previous work [A. Di Pietro et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 105, 022701 (2010).], the elastic scattering angular distribution of the collisions 9,10 Be+ 64 Zn as well as the angular distribution for the quasielastic scattering and transfer/breakup cross sections for the 11 Be+ 64 Zn reaction were briefly reported. The suppression of the quasielastic angular distribution in the Coulomb-nuclear interference angular region observed in the collision of the 11 Be halo nucleus with respect to the other two beryllium isotopes was interpreted as being caused by a long-range absorption owing to the long decay length of the 11 Be wave function. In this paper, new continuum-discretized coupledchannel calculations of the 11 Be+ 64 Zn reaction are reported in the attempt to interpret the effect of coupling with the breakup channels on the measured cross sections. The calculations show that the observed suppression of the Coulomb-nuclear interference peak is caused by a combined effect of Coulomb and nuclear couplings to the breakup channels.
Using decays of a clean source of 12 N produced at the IGISOL facility, we have measured the breakup of the 12 C (12.71 MeV) state into three particles with a segmented particle detector setup. The high quality of the data permits solving the question of the breakup mechanism of the 12.71 MeV state, a longstanding problem in few-body nuclear physics. Among existing models, a modified sequential model fits the data best, but systematic deviations indicate that a three-body description is needed.
The 9 Li + 2 H reaction has been investigated at 2.36 MeV/u at the REX-ISOLDE facility. In this Letter we focus on the 10 Li + p channel which potentially holds spectroscopic information on the unbound nucleus 10 Li. The experimental excitation energy spectrum and angular distribution are compared with CCBA calculations. These calculations clearly support the existence of a low-lying (s) virtual state, with a (negative) scattering length of the order a s ∼ 13-24 fm and a p 1/2 resonance with an energy of E r 0.38 MeV and a width of Γ 0.2 MeV.
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