Stellar Evolution Constraints on the Triple-Alpha Reaction Rate
Takuma Suda, Raphael Hirschi, and Masayuki Y. Fujimoto

TL;DR
This study uses stellar evolution models to constrain the triple-alpha reaction rate, revealing that recent revisions significantly affect low- and intermediate-mass star evolution and suggesting the reaction rate should be lower than current estimates.
Contribution
The paper provides quantitative constraints on the triple-alpha reaction rate based on stellar evolution, challenging recent revisions and proposing a maximum rate consistent with observed stellar phenomena.
Findings
Revised rate suppresses helium shell flashes in low-mass stars.
Reaction rate should be less than ~10^{-29} cm^6 s^{-1} mol^{-2} at 10^{7.8} K.
Enhanced CNO cycle rates cannot replicate observed RGB tip luminosity.
Abstract
We investigate the quantitative constraint on the triple-alpha reaction rate based on stellar evolution theory, motivated by the recent significant revision of the rate proposed by nuclear physics calculations. Targeted stellar models were computed in order to investigate the impact of that rate in the mass range of 0.8 < M / Msun < 25 and in the metallicity range between Z = 0 and Z = 0.02. The revised rate has a significant impact on the evolution of low- and intermediate-mass stars, while its influence on the evolution of massive stars (M >~ 10 Msun) is minimal. We find that employing the revised rate suppresses helium shell flashes on AGB phase for stars in the initial mass range 0.8 < M / Msun < 6, which is contradictory to what is observed. The absence of helium shell flashes is due to the weak temperature dependence of the revised triple-alpha reaction cross section at the…
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