Solution of the alpha-potential mystery in the gamma-process and its impact on the Nd/Sm ratio in meteorites
T. Rauscher

TL;DR
This paper investigates the discrepancy in the gamma-process nucleosynthesis predictions for Sm isotopes in meteorites, revealing that low-energy Coulomb excitation significantly impacts reaction rates, thus affecting the predicted isotopic ratios.
Contribution
It demonstrates that low-energy Coulomb excitation explains the failure of optical potentials to predict alpha-induced reaction cross sections accurately, impacting astrophysical nucleosynthesis models.
Findings
Coulomb excitation competes with compound nucleus formation at low energies.
The 148Gd(gamma,alpha) rate is higher than previously assumed.
Predicted Sm isotope ratios conflict with meteoritic data due to this effect.
Abstract
The 146Sm/144Sm ratio in the early solar system has been constrained by Nd/Sm isotope ratios in meteoritic material. Predictions of 146Sm and 144Sm production in the gamma-process in massive stars are at odds with these constraints and this is partly due to deficiences in the prediction of the reaction rates involved. The production ratio depends almost exclusively on the (gamma,n)/(gamma,alpha) branching at 148Gd. A measurement of 144Sm(alpha,gamma)148Gd at low energy had discovered considerable discrepancies between cross section predictions and the data. Although this reaction cross section mainly depends on the optical alpha+nucleus potential, no global optical potential has yet been found which can consistently describe the results of this and similar alpha-induced reactions at the low energies encountered in astrophysical environments. The untypically large deviation in…
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