Oxygen opacity experiments for stellar interiors at Z
ORAL
Abstract
Much of what we know about the universe is rooted in our understanding of the Sun. However, ongoing disagreement between solar models and helioseismic measurements of the interior structure of the Sun raises concerns about the accuracy of stellar models. One hypothesis that could help resolve this discrepancy is if the opacities of matter at solar interior conditions are higher than models predict. Experiments on the Z Machine investigate this by measuring iron and oxygen opacities at conditions near the solar convection zone base (CZB). The published iron measurements are higher than predictions, supporting this hypothesis. This talk will focus on the progress of the oxygen opacity experiments. Oxygen is the largest contributor to the opacity at the solar CZB and no experimental benchmark in this regime exists to date. We will discuss our methods for measuring the opacity and for characterizing the plasma and describe preliminary results.
*This work was supported by the Wootton Center for Astrophysical Plasma Properties under NNSA Stewardship Science Academic Alliances award number DE-NA0004149 and the Fundamental Science Program of SNL. SNL is managed and operated by NTESS under DOE NNSA contract DE-NA0003525.
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Presenters
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Daniel C Mayes
- University of Texas at Austin