Improved precision on the experimental E0 decay branching ratio of the Hoyle state
T.K. Eriksen, T. Kib\'edi, M.W. Reed, A.E. Stuchbery, K.J. Cook, A., Akber, B. Alshahrani, A.A. Avaa, K. Banerjee, A.C. Berriman, L.T. Bezzina, L., Bignell, J. Buete, I.P. Carter, B.J. Coombes, J.T.H. Dowie, M. Dasgupta, L.J., Evitts, A.B. Garnsworthy, M.S.M. Gerathy, T.J. Gray

TL;DR
This paper reports a more precise measurement of the E0 decay branching ratio of the Hoyle state in carbon-12, which is crucial for understanding stellar carbon synthesis via the 3-alpha process.
Contribution
The study provides an improved measurement of the E0 decay branching ratio of the Hoyle state, reducing uncertainty and refining the value used in stellar nucleosynthesis models.
Findings
E0 branching ratio measured as 8.2(5)×10⁻⁶
New value is 14% larger than previous estimate
Uncertainty reduced from 9% to 5%
Abstract
Stellar carbon synthesis occurs exclusively via the process, in which three particles fuse to form C in the excited Hoyle state, followed by electromagnetic decay to the ground state. The Hoyle state is above the threshold, and the rate of stellar carbon production depends on the radiative width of this state. The radiative width cannot be measured directly, and must instead be deduced by combining three separately measured quantities. One of these quantities is the decay branching ratio of the Hoyle state, and the current \% uncertainty on the radiative width stems mainly from the uncertainty on this ratio. The branching ratio was deduced from a series of pair conversion measurements of the and transitions depopulating the Hoyle state and state in C, respectively. The excited states were populated by the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNuclear physics research studies · Atomic and Molecular Physics · Scientific Research and Discoveries
