A new $^{12}$C + $^{12}$C nuclear reaction rate: impact on stellar evolution
E. Monpribat, S. Martinet, S. Courtin, M. Heine, S. Ekstr\"om, D. G., Jenkins, A. Choplin, P. Adsley, D. Curien, M. Moukaddam, J. Nippert, S., Tsiatsiou, G. Meynet

TL;DR
This study introduces new $^{12}$C + $^{12}$C reaction rates with uncertainty estimates and analyzes their effects on stellar evolution, particularly on C-burning phases in massive stars, using updated models and experimental data.
Contribution
It provides new reaction rates and analytical formulas for stellar models, and evaluates their impact on C-burning in massive stars, considering different extrapolation models and experimental constraints.
Findings
C-burning temperatures are within experimental sensitivity.
Rates can differ by over an order of magnitude at C-burning temperatures.
Impact on stellar structure during C-burning is modest despite rate variations.
Abstract
This work presents new C + C reaction rates in the form of numerical tables with associated uncertainty estimation, as well as analytical formulae that can be directly implemented into stellar evolution codes. This article further describes the impact of these new rates on C-burning in stars. We determine reaction rates for two cross-section extrapolation models: one based on the fusion-hindrance phenomenon, and the other on fusion-hindrance plus a resonance, and compare our results to previous data. Using the GENEC stellar evolution code, we study how these new rates impact the C-burning phases in two sets of stellar models for stars with 12 M and 25 M initial masses chosen to be highly representative of the diversity of massive stars. The effective temperatures of C-burning in both sets of stellar models are entirely covered by the sensitivity of the…
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