Gamma-ray emission in proton-induced nuclear reactions on natC and Mylar targets over the incident energy range of Ep = 30-200 MeV. Astrophysical implications
Y.Rahma, S. Ouichaoui, J. Kiener, E. A. Lawrie, J. J. Lawrie, V., Tatischeff, A. Belhout, D. Moussa, W. Yahia-Cherif, H. Benhabiles-Mezhoud, T., D. Bucher, T.R.S. Dinoko, A. Chafa, J. L. Conradie, S. Damache, M. Debabi, I., Deloncle, J. L. Easton, M. Fouka, C. Hamadache

TL;DR
This study measured gamma-ray production cross sections from proton reactions on natural carbon and Mylar, providing new experimental data and improved theoretical models relevant for understanding astrophysical gamma-ray emissions.
Contribution
It offers new experimental cross section data for gamma-ray lines and refines nuclear reaction models to better match observed astrophysical gamma-ray emissions.
Findings
New cross section data for 10 gamma-ray lines from proton reactions.
Modified nuclear models improved agreement with experimental data.
Astrophysical implications for gamma-ray emissions in space.
Abstract
We have measured the gamma-ray line production cross sections in proton-induced nuclear reactions on various target nuclei abundant in astrophysical sites over the incident energy range of Ep = 30 - 200 MeV. We carried out experimental campaigns in joint collaboration at the K = 200 cyclotron of iThemba LABS using a high-energy resolution, high-efficiency detection array composed of 8 Compton-suppressed clover detectors comprising 32 HP-Ge crystals for recording the gamma-ray spectra. In the current paper, we focus on de-excitation lines produced in proton irradiations of natC and Mylar targets. In particular, on the prominent 4.439 and 6.129 MeV lines of C and O which are among the strongest lines emitted in solar flares and in interactions of low-energy cosmic rays with the gas and dust of the inner galaxy. We report new gamma-ray production experimental cross section…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNuclear Physics and Applications · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · X-ray Spectroscopy and Fluorescence Analysis
