Nuclear structure of 30S and its implications for nucleosynthesis in classical novae
K. Setoodehnia, A. A. Chen, D. Kahl, T. Komatsubara, J.Jos\'e, R., Longland, Y. Abe, D. N. Binh, J. Chen, S. Cherubini, J. A. Clark, C. M., Deibel, S. Fukuoka, T. Hashimoto, T. Hayakawa, J. Hendriks, Y. Ishibashi, Y., Ito, S. Kubono, W. N. Lennard, T. Moriguchi, D. Nagae

TL;DR
This study refines the nuclear level structure of 30S, significantly reducing the uncertainty in the 29P(p,gamma)30S reaction rate, which impacts silicon isotope predictions in nova nucleosynthesis.
Contribution
The paper provides new experimental data on 30S energy levels and improved reaction rate estimates, enhancing understanding of nucleosynthesis in classical novae.
Findings
Resonance energies in 30S measured with higher precision.
Uncertainty in the 29P(p,gamma)30S reaction rate is substantially reduced.
Predicted silicon isotope abundances in novae are affected by the new rate.
Abstract
The uncertainty in the 29P(p,gamma)30S reaction rate over the temperature range of 0.1 - 1.3 GK was previously determined to span ~4 orders of magnitude due to the uncertain location of two previously unobserved 3+ and 2+ resonances in the 4.7 - 4.8 MeV excitation region in 30S. Therefore, the abundances of silicon isotopes synthesized in novae, which are relevant for the identification of presolar grains of putative nova origin, were uncertain by a factor of 3. To investigate the level structure of 30S above the proton threshold (4394.9(7) keV), a charged-particle spectroscopy and an in-beam gamma-ray spectroscopy experiments were performed. Differential cross sections of the 32S(p,t)30S reaction were measured at 34.5 MeV. Distorted wave Born approximation calculations were performed to constrain the spin-parity assignments of the observed levels. An energy level scheme was deduced…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
