The advanced evolution of massive stars: I. New reaction rates for carbon and oxygen nuclear reactions
T. Dumont, A. Bonhomme, A. Griffiths, A. Choplin, M. A. Aloy, G. Meynet, K. Godbey, C. Simenel, G. Scamps, F. Castillo, A. Cosoli-Ortega, and S. Courtin

TL;DR
This paper investigates how new nuclear reaction rates for key carbon and oxygen reactions affect the evolution, nucleosynthesis, and final fate of massive stars, highlighting the importance of accurate nuclear data.
Contribution
It introduces updated reaction rates based on fusion suppression scenarios and TDHF calculations, demonstrating their significant impact on stellar evolution models.
Findings
Updated rates alter the 12C/16O ratio, affecting stellar fate.
New fusion rates shorten burning lifetimes and shift ignition conditions.
Theoretical rates influence core structure and nucleosynthesis outcomes.
Abstract
The nuclear rates for reactions involving 12C and 16O are key to compute the energy release and nucleosynthesis of massive stars during their evolution. These rates shape the stellar structure and evolution, and impact the nature of the final compact remnant. We explore the impact of new nuclear reaction rates for 12C({\alpha},{\gamma})16O, 12C+12C, 12C+16O and 16O+16O reactions for massive stars. We aim to investigate how the structure and nucleosynthesis evolve and how these processes influence the stellar fate. We computed stellar models using the GENEC code, including updated rates for 12C({\alpha},{\gamma})16O and, for the three fusion reactions, new rates following a fusion suppression scenario and new theoretical rates obtained with TDHF calculations. The updated 12C({\alpha},{\gamma})16O rates mainly impact the chemical structure evolution changing the 12C/16O ratio with little…
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