TY - JOUR
T1 - The C 12 (α, 3) O 16 reaction and its implications for stellar helium burning
AU - Deboer, R. J.
AU - Görres, J.
AU - Wiescher, M.
AU - Azuma, R. E.
AU - Best, A.
AU - Brune, C. R.
AU - Fields, C. E.
AU - Jones, S.
AU - Pignatari, M.
AU - Sayre, D.
AU - Smith, K.
AU - Timmes, Francis
AU - Uberseder, E.
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors acknowledge many useful discussions with M. Avila (ANL), A. DiLeva (INFN), H. O. U. Fynbo (AU), G. Imbriani (INFN), L. Gialanella (CIRCE), G. Hale (LANL), A. Heger (Monash U.), C. Matei (NPL), M. Paris (LANL), A. Roberts (USD), G. V. Rogachev (TAMU), D. Schürmann (CIRCE), O. Straniero (INAF Teramo), F. Strieder (SDSMT), and A. Villano (UMN). R. J. D., M. W., and J. G. gratefully acknowledge funding by the National Science Foundation through Grant No. Phys-0758100 and the Joint Institute for Nuclear Astrophysics through Grant No. Phys-0822648. R. J. D. also acknowledges support from the Notre Dame Center for Research Computing and the hospitality of the INFN during a portion of this work. M. P. and S. J. acknowledge significant support from NuGrid via NSF Grants No. PHY 02-16783 and No. PHY 09-22648 (Joint Institute for Nuclear Astrophysics, JINA), NSF Grant No. PHY-1430152 (JINA Center for the Evolution of the Elements), and the EU MIRG-CT-2006-046520. M. P. acknowledges support from the “Lendulet-2014” Programme of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, the SNF (Switzerland), and the UK BRIDGCE network. NuGrid dataare served by Canfar/CADC. S. J. is supported by the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation and acknowledges support from the Klaus Tschira Stiftung. M. P. also acknowledges PRACE, through its Distributed Extreme Computing Initiative, for resource allocations on Sisu (CSC, Finland), Archer (EPCC, UK), and Beskow (KTH, Sweden) and the support of STFC’s DiRAC High Performance Computing Facilities. Ongoing resource allocations on the University of Hull’s High Performance Computing Facility—viper—are gratefully acknowledged. The work of C. R. B. was supported in part by the U.S. Department of Energy, Grants No. DE-FG02-88ER40387 and No. DE-NA0002905. C. E. F. acknowledges partial support from a Predoctoral Fellowship administered by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine on behalf of the Ford Foundation and an Edward J. Petry Graduate Fellowship from Michigan State University.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 American Physical Society.
PY - 2017/9/7
Y1 - 2017/9/7
N2 - The creation of carbon and oxygen in our Universe is one of the forefront questions in nuclear astrophysics. The determination of the abundance of these elements is key to our understanding of both the formation of life on Earth and to the life cycles of stars. While nearly all models of different nucleosynthesis environments are affected by the production of carbon and oxygen, a key ingredient, the precise determination of the reaction rate of C12(α, 3)O16, has long remained elusive. This is owed to the reaction's inaccessibility, both experimentally and theoretically. Nuclear theory has struggled to calculate this reaction rate because the cross section is produced through different underlying nuclear mechanisms. Isospin selection rules suppress the E1 component of the ground state cross section, creating a unique situation where the E1 and E2 contributions are of nearly equal amplitudes. Experimentally there have also been great challenges. Measurements have been pushed to the limits of state-of-the-art techniques, often developed for just these measurements. The data have been plagued by uncharacterized uncertainties, often the result of the novel measurement techniques that have made the different results challenging to reconcile. However, the situation has markedly improved in recent years, and the desired level of uncertainty ‰10% may be in sight. In this review the current understanding of this critical reaction is summarized. The emphasis is placed primarily on the experimental work and interpretation of the reaction data, but discussions of the theory and astrophysics are also pursued. The main goal is to summarize and clarify the current understanding of the reaction and then point the way forward to an improved determination of the reaction rate.
AB - The creation of carbon and oxygen in our Universe is one of the forefront questions in nuclear astrophysics. The determination of the abundance of these elements is key to our understanding of both the formation of life on Earth and to the life cycles of stars. While nearly all models of different nucleosynthesis environments are affected by the production of carbon and oxygen, a key ingredient, the precise determination of the reaction rate of C12(α, 3)O16, has long remained elusive. This is owed to the reaction's inaccessibility, both experimentally and theoretically. Nuclear theory has struggled to calculate this reaction rate because the cross section is produced through different underlying nuclear mechanisms. Isospin selection rules suppress the E1 component of the ground state cross section, creating a unique situation where the E1 and E2 contributions are of nearly equal amplitudes. Experimentally there have also been great challenges. Measurements have been pushed to the limits of state-of-the-art techniques, often developed for just these measurements. The data have been plagued by uncharacterized uncertainties, often the result of the novel measurement techniques that have made the different results challenging to reconcile. However, the situation has markedly improved in recent years, and the desired level of uncertainty ‰10% may be in sight. In this review the current understanding of this critical reaction is summarized. The emphasis is placed primarily on the experimental work and interpretation of the reaction data, but discussions of the theory and astrophysics are also pursued. The main goal is to summarize and clarify the current understanding of the reaction and then point the way forward to an improved determination of the reaction rate.
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U2 - 10.1103/RevModPhys.89.035007
DO - 10.1103/RevModPhys.89.035007
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85032673599
SN - 0034-6861
VL - 89
JO - Reviews of Modern Physics
JF - Reviews of Modern Physics
IS - 3
M1 - 035007
ER -