Taming neutrons for nuclear astrophysics

18.03.2024 16:30 - 18:00

Iris Dillmann (TRIUMF/University of Victoria, Vancouver, Canada)

Neutrons play a crucial role in the synthesis of elements heavier than iron in stars and stellar
explosions via the slow (s), intermediate (i), and rapid (r) neutron capture processes. The
neutrons for these astrophysical processes are produced either in-situ by alpha-induced
reactions (in the s- and i-process) or available in copious amounts from the neutron-rich
astrophysical environment (r process).
In all three processes, the fine balance between neutron capture and beta-decay rates under the
given astrophysical conditions defines how long a nucleus can accumulate material before
decaying into the next isotopic chain. Due to the location of these processes on the chart of
nuclei, the availability of experimental data greatly differs. In the past decades we have come a
long way to better understand these astrophysical processes by measuring nuclear physics
proporties of more and more exotic nuclei. While masses and beta-decay half-lives are well
measured for the majority of the presently known ~3300 nuclei, neutron capture reactions have
predominantly measured at and close to stability in the past 50 years [1], with satisfying
precision for most astrophysical modelling. However, the direct measurement of neutron cross
sections with shorter half-lives (half-live <1 year) requires the use of radioactive beams in
inverse kinematics and the development of new methods.
I will introduce a new proposal for the direct measurement of neutron capture cross sections of
shorter-lived nuclei. So far only indirect methods have been used. I will describe a path
towards a pioneering facility consisting of a heavy-ion storage ring connected to our ISAC
radioactive beam facility at TRIUMF where some of these reactions could be measured
directly, with a moderated neutron target [1].
[1] I. Dillmann, O. Kester, et al., Eur. Phys. J. A59 (2023) 105

Organiser:
R. Golser, K. Hain, W. Kutschera
Location:
1090 Wien, Währinger Str. 17, "Kavalierstrakt", 1. Stock, Victor-Franz-Hess Hörsaal