Measurement of the 140Ce(n,γ) Cross Section at n_TOF and Its Astrophysical Implications for the Chemical Evolution of the Universe
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Amaducci, S.; Ogállar Ruiz, Francisco; Porras Sánchez, José Ignacio; Praena Rodríguez, Antonio Javier; Torres Sánchez, Pablo; TOF Collaboration, /Editorial
American Physical Society
Date
2024-03-21Referencia bibliográfica
S. Amaducci et al. (n_TOF Collaboration). Measurement of the 140Ce(n,γ) Cross Section at n_TOF and Its Astrophysical Implications for the Chemical Evolution of the Universe. Phys. Rev. Lett. 132, 122701 (2024) [10.1103/PhysRevLett.132.122701]
Patrocinador
U.S. National Science Foundation (Grants No. AST 1613536, No. AST 1815403/1815767, No. AST 2205847, and No. PHY 1430152—Joint Institute for Nuclear Astrophysics—Chemical Evolution of the Elements); European Union—NextGenerationEU RFF M4C2 1.1 PRIN 2022 project “2022RJLWHN URKA”; INAF Theory Grant “Understanding R-process & Kilonovae Aspects (URKA)”; MSMTof the Czech Republic, the Charles University UNCE/SCI/013 projectRésumé
140Ce(n, γ) is a key reaction for slow neutron-capture (s-process) nucleosynthesis due to being a
bottleneck in the reaction flow. For this reason, it was measured with high accuracy (uncertainty ≈5%) at
the n_TOF facility, with an unprecedented combination of a high purity sample and low neutron-sensitivity
detectors. The measured Maxwellian averaged cross section is up to 40% higher than previously accepted
values. Stellar model calculations indicate a reduction around 20% of the s-process contribution to the
Galactic cerium abundance and smaller sizeable differences for most of the heavier elements. No variations
are found in the nucleosynthesis from massive stars.