No Arabic abstract
The $^3$He($alpha$,$gamma$)$^7$Be reaction is a widely studied nuclear reaction; however, it is still not understood with the required precision. It has a great importance both in Big Bang nucleosynthesis and in solar hydrogen burning. The low mass number of the reaction partners makes it also suitable for testing microscopic calculations. Despite the high number of experimental studies, none of them addresses the $^3$He($alpha$,$gamma$)$^7$Be reaction cross sections above 3.1-MeV center-of-mass energy. Recently, a previously unobserved resonance in the $^6$Li(p,$gamma$)$^7$Be reaction suggested a new level in $^7$Be, which would also have an impact on the $^3$He($alpha$,$gamma$)$^7$Be reaction in the energy range above 4.0 MeV. The aim of the present experiment is to measure the $^3$He($alpha$,$gamma$)$^7$Be reaction cross section in the energy range of the proposed level. For this investigation the activation technique was used. A thin window gas-cell target confining $^3$He gas was irradiated using an $alpha$ beam. The $^7$Be produced was implanted into the exit foil. The $^7$Be activity was determined by counting the $gamma$ rays following its decay by a well-shielded high-purity germanium detector. Reaction cross sections have been determined between $E_{cm} = 4.0 - 4.4$ MeV with 0.04-MeV steps covering the energy range of the proposed nuclear level. One lower-energy cross-section point was also determined to be able to compare the results with previous studies. A constant cross section of around 10.5 $mu$barn was observed around the $^7$Be proton separation energy. An upper limit of 45 neV for the strength of a $^3$He($alpha$,$gamma$)$^7$Be resonance is derived.
The astrophysical $^{3}{rm He}(alpha, gamma)^{7}{rm Be}$ and $^{3}{rm H}(alpha, gamma)^{7}{rm Li}$ direct capture processes are studied in the framework of the two-body model with the potentials of a simple Gaussian form, which describe correctly the phase-shifts in the s-, p-, d-, and f-waves, as well as the binding energy and the asymptotic normalization constant of the ground $p_{3/2}$ and the first excited $p_{1/2}$ bound states. It is shown that the E1-transition from the initial s-wave to the final p-waves is strongly dominant in both capture reactions. On this basis the s-wave potential parameters are adjusted to reproduce the new data of the LUNA collaboration around 100 keV and the newest data at the Gamov peak estimated with the help of the observed neutrino fluxes from the Sun, $S_{34}$(23$^{+6}_{-5}$ keV)=0.548$pm$0.054 keV b for the astrophysical S-factor of the capture process $^{3}{rm He}(alpha, gamma)^{7}{rm Be}$. The resulting model describes well the astrophysical S-factor in low-energy Big Bang nucleosynthesis region of 180-400 keV, however has a tendency to underestimate the data above 0.5 MeV. Two-body potentials, adjusted on the properties of the $^7$Be nucleus, $^3{rm He}+alpha$ elastic scattering data and the astrophysical S-factor of the $^{3}{rm He}(alpha, gamma)^{7}{rm Be}$ direct capture reaction, are able to reproduce the properties of the $^7$Li nucleus, the binding energies of the ground 3/2$^-$ and first excited 1/2$^-$ states, and phase shifts of the $^3 {rm H}+alpha$ elastic scattering in partial waves. Most importantly, these potential models can successfully describe both absolute value and energy dependence of the existing experimental data for the mirror astrophysical $^{3}{rm H}(alpha, gamma)^{7}{rm Li}$ capture reaction without any additional adjustment of the parameters.
The ${^3{rm He}}(alpha,gamma){^7{rm Be}}$ and ${^3{rm H}}(alpha,gamma){^7{rm Li}}$ astrophysical $S$ factors are calculated within the no-core shell model with continuum using a renormalized chiral nucleon-nucleon interaction. The ${^3{rm He}}(alpha,gamma){^7{rm Be}}$ astrophysical $S$ factors agree reasonably well with the experimental data while the ${^3{rm H}}(alpha,gamma){^7{rm Li}}$ ones are overestimated. The seven-nucleon bound and resonance states and the $alpha+{^3{rm He}}/{^3{rm H}}$ elastic scattering are also studied and compared with experiment. The low-lying resonance properties are rather well reproduced by our approach. At low energies, the $s$-wave phase shift, which is non-resonant, is overestimated.
We use the next-to-leading-order (NLO) amplitude in an effective field theory (EFT) for ${}^3$He + ${}^4$He $rightarrow {}^7$Be + $gamma$ to perform the extrapolation of higher-energy data to solar energies. At this order the EFT describes the capture process using an s-wave scattering length and effective range, the asymptotic behavior of $^7$Be and its excited state, and short-distance contributions to the E1 capture amplitude. We use a Bayesian analysis to infer the multi-dimensional posterior of these parameters from capture data below 2 MeV. The total $S$-factor $S(0)= 0.578^{+0.015}_{-0.016}$ keV b at 68% degree of belief. We also find significant constraints on $^3$He-$^4$He scattering parameters.
Astrophysical $S$ factors and reaction rates of the direct radiative capture processes $^{3}{rm He}(alpha, gamma)^{7}{rm Be}$ and $^{3}{rm H}(alpha,gamma)^{7}{rm Li}$, as well as the primordial abundance of the $^{7}{rm Li}$ element, are estimated in the framework of a modified two-body potential model. It is shown that suitable modification of phase-equivalent $alpha-^{3}{rm He}$ potentials in the $d$ waves can improve the description of the astrophysical $S$ factor for the direct $^{3}{rm He}(alpha, gamma)^{7}{rm Be}$ radiative capture reaction at energies above 0.5 MeV. An estimated $^{7}{rm Li/H}$ abundance ratio of $(4.89pm 0.18 )times 10^{-10}$ is in very good agreement with the recent measurement of $(5.0pm 0.3) times 10^{-10}$ by the LUNA collaboration.
The reaction rates of the direct astrophysical capture processes $^{3}{rm He}(alpha, gamma)^{7}{rm Be}$ and $^{3}{rm H}(alpha,gamma)^{7}{rm Li}$, as well as the abundance of the $^{7}{rm Li}$ element are estimated in the framework of a two-body potential model. The estimated $^{7}{rm Li/H}$ abundance ratio of $^{7}{rm Li/H}=(5.07pm 0.14 )times 10^{-10}$ is in a very good agreement with the recent measurement $^{7}{rm Li/H}=(5.0pm 0.3) times 10^{-10}$ of the LUNA collaboration.