Understanding the cosmic abundance of $^{22}$Na: lifetime measurements in $^{23}$Mg
C. Foug\`eres (GANIL, ANL), F. de Oliveira Santos (GANIL), N. A., Smirnova (LP2IB), C. Michelagnoli (GANIL, ILL), GANIL-E710/AGATA, collaborations

TL;DR
This study measures the lifetime and reaction rates of a key state in $^{23}$Mg to improve predictions of $^{22}$Na production in novae, aiding gamma-ray detection efforts.
Contribution
It provides new lifetime and proton branching ratio measurements of a critical resonance in $^{23}$Mg, refining the nuclear reaction rate for $^{22}$Na synthesis in novae.
Findings
Reevaluated $^{22}$Na(p, $\gamma$)$^{23}$Mg reaction rate.
Measured lifetime and proton branching ratio of the key $^{23}$Mg state.
Shell-model calculations show small $M1$ matrix elements and spectroscopic factors.
Abstract
Simulations of explosive nucleosynthesis in novae predict the production of Na, a key astronomical observable to constrain nova models. Its gamma-ray line at 1.275 MeV has not yet been observed by the gamma-ray space telescopes. The Ne/Ne ratio in presolar grains, a possible tool to identify nova grains, also depends on Na produced. Uncertainties on its yield in classical novae currently originate from the rate of the Na(p, )Mg reaction. At peak novae temperatures, this reaction is dominated by a resonance at E=0.204 MeV, corresponding to the =7.785 MeV excited state in Mg. The resonance strengths measured so far disagree by one order of magnitude. An experiment has been performed at GANIL to measure the lifetime and the proton branching ratio of this key state, with a femtosecond resolution for the former. The…
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