Charged-particle branching ratios above the neutron threshold in $^{19}$F: constraining $^{15}$N production in core-collapse supernovae
P. Adsley, F. Hammache, N. de S\'er\'eville, V. Alcindor, M. Assi \'e,, D. Beaumel M.Chabot, M. Degerlier, C. Delafosse, T. Faestermann, F. Flavigny,, S. P. Fox, R. Garg, A.Georgiadou, S. A. Gillespie, J. Guillot, R., Hertenberger, V. Guimar\~aes, R. Hertenberger, A. Gottardo

TL;DR
This study investigates the decay properties of excited states in $^{19}$F above the neutron threshold to better understand the nuclear reactions influencing $^{15}$N production in supernovae, using two advanced experimental techniques.
Contribution
The paper provides new experimental data on charged-particle decays of neutron-unbound states in $^{19}$F, clarifying their decay modes and implications for astrophysical nucleosynthesis models.
Findings
Neutron-unbound levels in $^{19}$F predominantly decay via alpha emission.
The first proton decay branch from a neutron-unbound state lies 68 keV above the threshold.
Alpha decays are generally stronger than proton decays from these levels.
Abstract
Spatially-correlated overabundances of N and O observed in some low-density graphite meteoritic grains have been connected to nucleosynthesis taking place in the helium-burning shell during core-collapse supernovae. Two of the reactions which have been identified as important to the final abundances of N and O are F()N and F()O. The relative strengths of the F()N and F()O reactions depend on the relative and decays from states above the neutron threshold in F in addition to other properties. Experimental data on the charged-particle decays from these highly excited states are lacking or inconsistent. Two experiments were performed using proton inelastic scattering from LiF targets and magnetic spectrographs. The first experiment used the…
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