Direct mass measurements of neutron-rich zinc and gallium isotopes: an investigation of the formation of the first r-process peak

The prediction of isotopic abundances resulting from the rapid neutron capture process (r-process) requires high-precision mass measurements. Using TITAN's on-line time-of-flight spectrometer, first time mass measurements are performed for $^{83}$Zn and $^{86}$Ga. These measurements reduced unc...

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Hauptverfasser: Jacobs, Andrew, Nikas, Stylianos, Ash, John, Ashrafkhani, Behnam, Belosovic, Ivana, Bergmann, Julian, Brown, Callum, Cardona, Jaime, Dunling, Eleanor, Dickel, Timo, Egoriti, Luca, Gelinas, Gabriella, Hockenbery, Zach, Kakkar, Sakshi, Kootte, Brian, Molaebrahimi, Ali, Lykiardopoulou, Eleni Marina, Murboeck, Tobias, Paul, Stefan, Plass, Wolfgang R, Porter, William S, Simpson, Rane, Walls, Coulter, Wang, Yilin, Dilling, Jens, Kwiatkowski, Ania
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The prediction of isotopic abundances resulting from the rapid neutron capture process (r-process) requires high-precision mass measurements. Using TITAN's on-line time-of-flight spectrometer, first time mass measurements are performed for $^{83}$Zn and $^{86}$Ga. These measurements reduced uncertainties, and are used to calculate isotopic abundances near the first r-process abundance peak using astrophysical conditions present during a binary neutron star (BNS) merger. Good agreement in abundance across a range of trajectories is found when comparing to several metal-poor stars while also strongly deviating from the solar r-process pattern. These findings point to a high degree of sensitivity to the electron fraction of a BNS merger on the final elemental abundance pattern for certain elements near the first r-process peak while others display universality. We find that small changes in electron fraction can produce distinct abundance patterns that match those of metal-poor stars with different classifications.
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.2309.11716