12–17 Jun 2016
University of Ottawa
America/Toronto timezone
Welcome to the 2016 CAP Congress! / Bienvenue au congrès de l'ACP 2016!

Nuclear Astrophysics with Radioactive Beams

13 Jun 2016, 09:30
50m
University of Ottawa

University of Ottawa

Plenary Speaker / Conférencier plénier Herzberg Public, Plenary, and Medal Talks / Conférenciers des sessions Herzberg, plénières et médaillés (CAP-ACP) M-PLEN Plenary Session - Start of Conference - Hendrik Schatz, Michigan State Univ./NSCL / Session plénière - Ouverture du Congrès - Hendrik Schatz, Michigan State Univ. / NSCL

Speaker

Hendrik Schatz (National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory)

Description

Stellar explosions and colliding neutron stars are important sources of the chemical elements in nature. The properties of very unstable isotopes that are created for fleeting moments in these extreme astrophysical sites, imprint themselves onto the nature of the explosion and the characteristic element patterns that are created and ultimately shape the composition of the visible universe. Accelerator facilities that produce beams of these short lived radioactive isotopes can now be used to study the relevant nuclear reaction rates and nuclear properties so one can understand in the laboratory how stars create elements. This also opens the door to using observed element patterns as a diagnostic tool to peek into the deep interiors of some of the most extreme stellar sites. I will review some of the current open questions related to astrophysical processes with unstable nuclei, and how experiments at current and planned rare isotope facilities in the US, Canada, and elsewhere, in concert with observations and astrophysical models, are addressing these questions.

Primary author

Hendrik Schatz (National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory)

Presentation materials

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