Experimental Constraint on Stellar Electron-Capture Rates from the ${}^{88}\text{Sr}(t,{}^{3}\text{He}+γ){}^{88}\text{Rb}$ reaction at 115 MeV/u
nucl-ex
/ Authors
J. C. Zamora, R. G. T. Zegers, Sam M. Austin, D. Bazin, B. A. Brown, P. C. Bender, H. L. Crawford, J. Engel, A. Falduto, A. Gade
and 15 more authors
P. Gastis, B. Gao, T. Ginter, C. J. Guess, S. Lipschutz, B. Longfellow, A. O. Macchiavelli, K. Miki, E. Ney, S. Noji, J. Pereira, J. Schmitt, C. Sullivan, R. Titus, D. Weisshaar
/ Abstract
The Gamow-Teller strength distribution from ${}^{88}$Sr was extracted from a $(t,{}^{3}\text{He}+γ)$ experiment at 115 MeV/$u$ to constrain estimates for the electron-capture rates on nuclei around $N=50$, between and including $^{78}$Ni and $^{88}$Sr, which are important for the late evolution of core-collapse supernovae. The observed strength below an excitation energy of 8 MeV was consistent with zero and below 10 MeV amounted to $0.1\pm0.05$. Except for a very-weak transition that could come from the 2.231-MeV $1^{+}$ state, no $γ$ lines that could be associated with the decay of known $1^{+}$ states were identified. The derived electron-capture rate from the measured strength distribution is more than an order of magnitude smaller than rates based on the single-state approximation presently used in astrophysical simulations for most nuclei near $N=50$. Rates based on shell-model and quasiparticle random-phase approximation calculations that account for Pauli blocking and core-polarization effects provide better estimates than the single-state approximation, although a relatively strong transition to the first $1^{+}$ state in $^{88}$Rb is not observed in the data. Pauli unblocking effects due to high stellar temperatures could partially counter the low electron-capture rates. The new data serves as a zero-temperature benchmark for constraining models used to estimate such effects.