Publications by authors named "K Riisager"

A significant fraction of stars between 7 and 11 solar masses are thought to become supernovae, but the explosion mechanism is unclear. The answer depends critically on the rate of electron capture on ^{20}Ne in the degenerate oxygen-neon stellar core. However, because of the unknown strength of the transition between the ground states of ^{20}Ne and ^{20}F, it has not previously been possible to fully constrain the rate.

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Article Synopsis
  • The ^{12}C(α,γ)^{16}O reaction is crucial in astrophysics, but its cross section is not well-defined in laboratory settings for key astrophysical energies.
  • The reduced alpha width, γ_{11}, of the 1^{-} level in ^{16}O is essential for accurately measuring this cross section, traditionally determined through specific nuclear reactions or decay processes.
  • New findings present improved branching ratios for β-decay processes, showing a significant increase in γ_{11}, which aligns with previous α-transfer studies and enhances the understanding of the ^{12}C(α,γ) reaction in hydrostatic helium burning.
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We report on the first observation of the unbound proton-rich nucleus 15Ne. Its ground state and first excited state were populated in two-neutron knockout reactions from a beam of 500 MeV/u 17Ne. The 15Ne ground state is found to be unbound by 2.

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The coupling between bound quantum states and those in the continuum is of high theoretical interest. Experimental studies of bound drip-line nuclei provide ideal testing grounds for such investigations since they, due to the feeble binding energy of their valence particles, are easy to excite into the continuum. In this Letter, continuum states in the heaviest particle-stable Be isotope, 14Be, are studied by employing the method of inelastic proton scattering in inverse kinematics.

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The current evaluation of the triple-α reaction rate assumes that the α decay of the 7.65 MeV, 0+ state in 12C, commonly known as the Hoyle state, proceeds sequentially via the ground state of 8Be. This assumption is challenged by the recent identification of two direct α-decay branches with a combined branching ratio of 17(5)%.

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