Revision of the 15N(p,{\gamma})16O reaction rate and oxygen abundance in H-burning zones
A. Caciolli, C. Mazzocchi, V. Capogrosso, D. Bemmerer, C. Broggini, P., Corvisiero, H. Costantini, Z. Elekes, A. Formicola, Zs. Fulop, G. Gervino, A., Guglielmetti, C. Gustavino, Gy. Gyurky, G. Imbriani, M. Junker, A. Lemut, M., Marta, R. Menegazzo, S. Palmerini, P. Prati

TL;DR
This paper presents a new precise measurement of the 15N(p,γ)16O reaction rate at stellar energies, crucial for understanding oxygen depletion in H-burning zones of stars, with implications for globular cluster star evolution.
Contribution
The study provides the first measurement of the 15N(p,γ)16O reaction rate over a key energy range, reducing uncertainties and revising previous reaction rate estimates by about a factor of two.
Findings
New reaction rate is about half of previous estimates.
Uncertainty in the reaction rate is reduced to 10%.
Results confirm previous R-matrix extrapolations.
Abstract
The NO cycle takes place in the deepest layer of a H-burning core or shell, when the temperature exceeds T {\simeq} 30 {\cdot} 106 K. The O depletion observed in some globular cluster giant stars, always associated with a Na enhancement, may be due to either a deep mixing during the RGB (red giant branch) phase of the star or to the pollution of the primordial gas by an early population of massive AGB (asymptotic giant branch) stars, whose chemical composition was modified by the hot bottom burning. In both cases, the NO cycle is responsible for the O depletion. The activation of this cycle depends on the rate of the 15N(p,{\gamma})16O reaction. A precise evaluation of this reaction rate at temperatures as low as experienced in H-burning zones in stellar interiors is mandatory to understand the observed O abundances. We present a new measurement of the 15N(p,{\gamma})16O reaction…
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