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The Gamow-Teller strength distribution from ${}^{88}$Sr was extracted from a $(t,{}^{3}text{He}+gamma)$ 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 $0.1pm0.05$. Except for a very-weak transition that could come from the 2.231-MeV $1^{+}$ state, no $gamma$ 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.
The bremsstrahlung flux-averaged cross sections for the photoneutron reactions $^{text{93}}$Nb($gamma $,xn;x=1-5)$^{text{(93-x)m,g}}$Nb were measured in the range of boundary energies of bremsstrahlung $gamma $-quanta $E_{gamma text{max}}$=33-93 MeV
Our understanding of the low-lying resonance structure in $^{12}$C remains incomplete. We have used the $^{11}text{B}(p,3alpha)gamma$ reaction at proton energies of $E_p=0.5-2.7$ MeV as a selective probe of the excitation region above the $3alpha$ th
In the late stages of stellar core-collapse, prior to core bounce, electron captures on medium-heavy nuclei drive deleptonization and simulations require the use of accurate reaction rates. Nuclei with neutron number near $N=50$, just above atomic nu
In this Letter we report on the first inverse kinematics measurement of key resonances in the ${}^{22}text{Ne}(p,gamma)^{23}text{Na}$ reaction which forms part of the NeNa cycle, and is relevant for ${}^{23}$Na synthesis in asymptotic giant branch (A
Transfer reactions provide information about the single-particle nature of nuclear levels. In particular, the differential cross sections from these measurements are sensitive to the angular momentum of the transferred particle and the spectroscopic