Nuclear astrophysics
Roland Diehl, Michael Wiescher

TL;DR
This paper reviews how nuclear reactions are studied in laboratories and observations to understand their role in cosmic environments, highlighting experimental, theoretical, and observational advances in nuclear astrophysics.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of recent experimental, theoretical, and observational methods used to study nuclear reactions in astrophysical contexts.
Findings
Advances in low-energy nuclear reaction measurements
Development of new experimental facilities and methods
Enhanced theoretical models for cosmic nuclear reactions
Abstract
Reactions between atomic nuclei are measured in great detail in terrestrial laboratory experiments; transferring and extrapolating this knowledge to how the same reactions act within cosmic environments presents major challenges. Cross-disciplinary efforts are needed in view of the many nuclear reactions that govern the chemical evolution of the universe, and occur in a broad range of stellar plasma conditions that require astrophysical exploration. Since the early identification of 'processes' of nucleosynthesis, new insights have been obtained on the complexity of nuclear reaction mechanisms. We use 12C induced capture and fusion processes to illustrate the challenge of low-energy measurements and of using theoretical methods to extrapolate measurements towards energy regimes within cosmic sources. Particle beam experiments at accelerator facilities above and deep underground simulate…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNuclear physics research studies · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Astronomical and nuclear sciences
