The study of key reactions shaping the post main-sequence evolution of massive stars in underground facilities
F. Ferraro, G.F. Ciani, A. Boeltzig, F. Cavanna, S. Zavatarelli

TL;DR
This paper reviews the advancements in underground nuclear astrophysics experiments, focusing on key reactions in post-main-sequence stellar evolution, and discusses future prospects with a new MV-range accelerator facility.
Contribution
It introduces the development of the LUNA-MV project for studying nuclear reactions relevant to later stellar stages, expanding the experimental capabilities beyond hydrogen burning.
Findings
Successful measurement of key reactions at relevant energies
Enhanced understanding of stellar nucleosynthesis processes
Potential for new discoveries with underground MV accelerators
Abstract
The chemical evolution of the Universe and several phases of the stellar life are regulated by minute nuclear reactions. The key point for each of these reactions is the value of cross sections at the energies at which they take place in stellar environments. Direct cross-section measurements are mainly hampered by the very low counting rate and by cosmic background, nevertheless they have become possible by combining the best experimental techniques with the cosmic silence of an underground laboratory. In the nineties the LUNA (Laboratory for Underground Nuclear Astrophysics) collaboration opened the era of underground nuclear astrophysics installing first a home-made 50 kV and later on, a second 400 kV accelerator under the Gran Sasso mountain in Italy: in 25 years of experimental activity, important reactions responsible for hydrogen burning could have been studied down to the…
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