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STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Carbon Creation Finding Set to Rock Astrophysics
by Staff Writers
Canberra, Australia (SPX) Oct 09, 2020

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A new measurement of how quickly stars create carbon may trigger a major shift in our understanding of how stars evolve and die, how the elements are created, and even the origin and abundance of the building blocks of life.

Physicists at the Australian National University and the University of Oslo reproduced how stars make carbon through a fleeting partnership of helium atoms known as the Hoyle state in two separate measurements. They found that carbon - the building block of life - is produced 34 percent faster than previously thought.

"It's a really surprising result, with profound implications across astrophysics," said Associate Professor Tibor Kibedi, one of the lead researchers from the Department of Nuclear Physics at ANU.

The Oslo experiment was reported in Physical Review Letters, and the ANU findings were published in Physical Review C.

Stars produce carbon through the triple-alpha process, where three alpha particles (helium nuclei) collide and fuse within a tiny fraction of a second. This process is so unlikely that for many years astrophysicists were at a loss to explain how carbon and heavier elements could be created in the universe.

In 1953 renowned astronomer Sir Fred Hoyle suggested a solution to the conundrum: a previously unknown excited state of carbon, very close to the energy of the triple alpha process. This excited state, now known as the Hoyle state, and would act as a steppingstone to producing stable carbon.

This in turn paves the way for further fusion reactions, allowing stars to make the heavier elements from oxygen to iron and beyond.

The carbon and other elements formed inside stars eventually become the dust and gas from which planets are formed. Here on Earth, carbon chemistry is the basis for life.

"It's one of the miracles of the material world," Kibedi said. "Simply put, if the Hoyle state didn't exist, neither would we!"

Even with help from the Hoyle state, the formation of stable carbon is still very unlikely.

"For every 2500 Hoyle state nuclei produced," explained Kibedi, "only one transitions to stable carbon. The rest fall apart."

Directly measuring the carbon production rate is very difficult. Instead, physicists calculate it indirectly from observations of two different Hoyle state transitions.

To measure the first transition, Kibedi and his team at ANU's Heavy Ion Accelerator Facility (HIAF) fired a proton beam at an extremely thin sheet of carbon to form Hoyle state nuclei. A tiny fraction of the excited nuclei transition back to stable carbon by emitting an electron-positron pair, which the team detected with the HIAF's SUPER-E pair spectrometer.

At the same time, Kibedi and his team worked with researchers at the University of Oslo's Cyclotron Laboratory to measure the second transition, in which the Hoyle state emits a photon. They observed six billion Hoyle state reactions, of which just 200 decayed via the photon decay.

Combining the ANU and Oslo results, the team calculated the carbon production rate, its first major update in 40 years. They found it was more than a third larger than previously thought, an enormous change for such a critical astrophysical quantity.

"It was really unexpected," said Kibedi. "Nobody had looked at this particular measurement since 1976. Everyone assumed it was well known."

According to Dr. Meridith Joyce from ANU's Research School of Astronomy and Astrophysics, such a large shift would be a major event for stellar astrophysicists.

"An increase in the carbon production rate like this would have a big impact on a lot of our models," Joyce said.

"It would affect our understanding of how stars change over time, how they produce elements heavier than carbon, how we measure the age of stars and how long they will last, how often we expect to see supernova explosions, even whether they leave behind neutron stars or black holes."

With so many astronomical phenomena relying on the measurement, such a big adjustment to the previously accepted value will attract a lot of scrutiny. Kibedi is optimistic that more experiments will cement their results, including further work at the HIAF.

"It's important that more experiments are done to settle this," he said. "The Oslo experiment is being repeated, and the preliminary analysis seems to support our findings."

"Our original plan here at the ANU was to observe decays from both Hoyle state transitions in a single experiment for the first time. I'm still hopeful we can do that."

Research Reports: "Radiative Width of the Hoyle State from Gamma-Ray Spectroscopy" and "Improved Precision on the Experimental E0 Decay Branching Ratio of the Hoyle State"


Related Links
Australian National University
Stellar Chemistry, The Universe And All Within It


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Lithium is an ancient element that is almost as old as the universe itself. As one of the building blocks of our present-day universe though, the context of lithium observed in many celestial bodies often disaccord with predictions of classic theories. Lithium-rich stars, accounting for only 1% of the total number of the low-mass evolved stars, is one example of such conflict. They preserve up to thousands of times more lithium than the normal stars that account for the rest 99%. Astronomers are w ... read more

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