Constraining the <sup>30</sup>P(p,γ)<sup>31</sup>S reaction rate in ONe nova nucleosynthesis via <sup>31</sup>Cl β-delayed proton decay using GADGET

ORAL

Abstract

Classical novae occur in stellar binaries involving a white dwarf and a hydrogen-rich companion star. Accreted material from the donor star is compressed, heated, and mixed with the outer layers of the underlying white dwarf until it ignites in a thermonuclear runaway. For the most massive oxygen-neon (ONe) white dwarfs, the 30P(p,γ)31S reaction rate has been identified as the largest remaining nuclear uncertainty for modeling A>29 nucleosynthesis. The β+ decay of 31Cl strongly populates a 260-keV resonance which dominates the total rate for proton capture on 30P. The Gaseous Detector with Germanium Tagging (GADGET) was built to measure the proton branching ratio of this resonance via 31Cl(βp)30P. Here we present the results of an experiment at the National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory, in which we measured the weakest β-delayed proton intensity ever for resonances below 400 keV. With this result, shell model calculations for the lifetime, and past work on other resonances, we computed the thermonuclear rate for 30P(p,γ)31S. Simulations were performed using this newly constrained rate to predict the chemical and isotopic abundances of ONe nova ejecta. We compare these expected ratios with presolar grain data and astronomical observations to calibrate nuclear thermometers.

*This research was funded by the National Science Foundation under Grants No. PHY-1913554, No. PHY1102511, No. PHY-1565546, No. PHY-2110365, No. PHY-2011890, as well as by the Department of Energy Office of Science under Award No. DE-SC0016052. We acknowledge support from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC), the Spanish MINECO grant AYA2017-86274P, the E. U. FEDER funds, the AGAUR/Generalitat de Catalunya grant SGR-661/2017, and the EU Horizon 2020 grant 101008324 ChETEC-INFRA. This article also benefited from discussions within the ChETEC COST Action (CA16117). Additional funding sources include Korean NRF grant Nos. 2020R1A2C1005981 and 2016R1A5A1013277.

Publication: Phys. Rev. Lett. 128, 182701 – Published 3 May 2022

Presenters

  • Tamas A Budner

    • Michigan State University

Authors

  • Tamas A Budner

    • Michigan State University
  • Moshe Friedman

    • Michigan State University
  • Christopher L Wrede

    • Michigan State University
  • B. Alex Brown

    • Michigan State University
    • Michigan State University, Facility for Rare Isotope Beams
  • Jordi Jose

    • Institucion de Estudios Complutenses
  • David Perez-Loureiro

    • National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory
    • Canadian Nuclear Laboratories
  • Lijie Sun

    • Michigan State University
  • Jason Surbrook

    • Michigan State University
  • Yassid Ayyad

    • FRIB/NSCL
    • National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory
    • Michigan State University
  • Dan W Bardayan

    • University of Notre Dame
  • Kyungyuk Chae

    • Sungkyunkwan University
  • Alan Chen

    • McMaster Univ
    • McMaster University
  • Kelly A Chipps

    • ORNL
  • Marco Cortesi

    • NSCL Cyclotron Lab
  • Brent E Glassman

    • Michigan State University
  • Matthew Hall

    • University of Notre Dame
  • Molly A Janasik

    • Michigan State University
  • Johnson Liang

    • TRIUMF
    • McMaster Univ
    • McMaster University
  • Patrick O'Malley

    • University of Notre Dame
  • Emanuel Pollacco

    • CEA, France
    • University of Paris-Saclay
    • IRFU, CEA Saclay
  • Athanasios * Psaltis

    • McMaster University
  • Jordan Stomps

    • Michigan State University
  • Tyler Wheeler

    • Michigan State University