The new Felsenkeller 5 MV underground accelerator
Daniel Bemmerer, Thomas E. Cowan, Alexander Domula, Toralf D\"oring,, Marcel Grieger, Sebastian Hammer, Thomas Hensel, Lisa H\"ubinger, Arnd R., Junghans, Felix Ludwig, Stefan E. M\"uller, Stefan Reinicke, Bernd Rimarzig,, Konrad Schmidt, Ronald Schwengner, Klaus St\"ockel

TL;DR
The paper introduces a new 5 MV underground accelerator at Felsenkeller, Dresden, designed for nuclear astrophysics research, offering enhanced capabilities for studying stellar nuclear reactions with low background interference.
Contribution
It reports on the development, background assessment, and commissioning of a higher-energy underground accelerator for nuclear astrophysics, expanding research potential beyond previous facilities.
Findings
Background conditions are suitable for nuclear astrophysics experiments.
The accelerator can deliver up to 50μA beams of various ions.
It enables sensitive measurements of astrophysically relevant nuclear reactions.
Abstract
The field of nuclear astrophysics is devoted to the study of the creation of the chemical elements. By nature, it is deeply intertwined with the physics of the Sun. The nuclear reactions of the proton-proton cycle of hydrogen burning, including the 3He({\alpha},{\gamma})7Be reaction, provide the necessary nuclear energy to prevent the gravitational collapse of the Sun and give rise to the by now well-studied pp, 7Be, and 8B solar neutrinos. The not yet measured flux of 13N, 15O, and 17F neutrinos from the carbon-nitrogen-oxygen cycle is affected in rate by the 14N(p,{\gamma})15O reaction and in emission profile by the 12C(p,{\gamma})13N reaction. The nucleosynthetic output of the subsequent phase in stellar evolution, helium burning, is controlled by the 12C({\alpha},{\gamma})16O reaction. In order to properly interpret the existing and upcoming solar neutrino data, precise nuclear…
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