Investigating the astrophysical rp-process through atomic mass measurements

The Canadian Penning Trap (CPT) mass spectrometer at the Argonne National Laboratory makes precise mass measurements of both stable and unstable nuclides. To date, more than 60 radioactive isotopes having half-lives as short as one second have been measured with the CPT with a mass precision approa...

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Main Author: Clark, Jason A
Other Authors: Sharma, Kumar S. (Physics and Astronomy)
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/177
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-MWU.anitoba.ca-dspace#1993-1772013-01-11T13:31:12ZSharma, Kumar S. (Physics and Astronomy)Clark, Jason A2005-10-13T14:57:55Z2005-10-13T14:57:55Z2005-10-13T14:57:55Zhttp://hdl.handle.net/1993/177The Canadian Penning Trap (CPT) mass spectrometer at the Argonne National Laboratory makes precise mass measurements of both stable and unstable nuclides. To date, more than 60 radioactive isotopes having half-lives as short as one second have been measured with the CPT with a mass precision approaching 10 ppb. This thesis will present measurements made of nuclides along the rp-process path, which describes a process resulting from a series of rapid proton-capture reactions in an astrophysical environment. One possible site for the rp-process mechanism is an x-ray burst which results from the rapid accretion of hydrogen and helium from one star onto the surface of its neutron star binary companion. Mass measurements are required as key inputs to network calculations used to describe the rp-process in terms of the abundances of the nuclides produced, the light-curve profile of the x-ray bursts, and the energy produced. This thesis will describe the CPT apparatus, explain the method used to make precise mass measurements, and present the masses of the "waiting-point" nuclides <sup>68</sup>Se and <sup>64</sup>Ge. The mass measurement results, when used in x-ray burst models, confirm both <sup>68</sup>Se and <sup>64</sup>Ge as waiting-point nuclides which delay the rp-process by approximately 30 s and 7 s respectively.3730737 bytesapplication/pdfen_USrp-processPenning trapx-ray burstmass measurementInvestigating the astrophysical rp-process through atomic mass measurementsElectronic Thesis or DissertationPhysics and AstronomySharma, Kumar S. (Physics and Astronomy) Barber, Robert C. (Physics and Astronomy) Savard, Guy (Adjunct Professor, Physics and Astronomy) Thomson, Douglas J. (Electrical and Computer Engineering) Rehm, Karl E. (External Examiner, Argonne National Laboratory)Doctor of Philosophy (Ph.D.)October 2005
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic rp-process
Penning trap
x-ray burst
mass measurement
spellingShingle rp-process
Penning trap
x-ray burst
mass measurement
Clark, Jason A
Investigating the astrophysical rp-process through atomic mass measurements
description The Canadian Penning Trap (CPT) mass spectrometer at the Argonne National Laboratory makes precise mass measurements of both stable and unstable nuclides. To date, more than 60 radioactive isotopes having half-lives as short as one second have been measured with the CPT with a mass precision approaching 10 ppb. This thesis will present measurements made of nuclides along the rp-process path, which describes a process resulting from a series of rapid proton-capture reactions in an astrophysical environment. One possible site for the rp-process mechanism is an x-ray burst which results from the rapid accretion of hydrogen and helium from one star onto the surface of its neutron star binary companion. Mass measurements are required as key inputs to network calculations used to describe the rp-process in terms of the abundances of the nuclides produced, the light-curve profile of the x-ray bursts, and the energy produced. This thesis will describe the CPT apparatus, explain the method used to make precise mass measurements, and present the masses of the "waiting-point" nuclides <sup>68</sup>Se and <sup>64</sup>Ge. The mass measurement results, when used in x-ray burst models, confirm both <sup>68</sup>Se and <sup>64</sup>Ge as waiting-point nuclides which delay the rp-process by approximately 30 s and 7 s respectively. === October 2005
author2 Sharma, Kumar S. (Physics and Astronomy)
author_facet Sharma, Kumar S. (Physics and Astronomy)
Clark, Jason A
author Clark, Jason A
author_sort Clark, Jason A
title Investigating the astrophysical rp-process through atomic mass measurements
title_short Investigating the astrophysical rp-process through atomic mass measurements
title_full Investigating the astrophysical rp-process through atomic mass measurements
title_fullStr Investigating the astrophysical rp-process through atomic mass measurements
title_full_unstemmed Investigating the astrophysical rp-process through atomic mass measurements
title_sort investigating the astrophysical rp-process through atomic mass measurements
publishDate 2005
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/177
work_keys_str_mv AT clarkjasona investigatingtheastrophysicalrpprocessthroughatomicmassmeasurements
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