Astrophysics with Radioactive Atomic Nuclei
Abstract
We propose to advance investigations of electromagnetic radiation originating in atomic nuclei beyond its current infancy to a true astronomy. This nuclear emission is independent from conditions of gas, thus complements more traditional stronomical methods used to probe the nearby universe. Radioactive gamma-rays arise from isotopes which are made in specific locations inside massive stars, their decay in interstellar space traces an otherwise not directly observable hot and tenuous phase of the ISM, which is crucial for feedback from massive stars. Its intrinsic clocks can measure characteristic times of processes within the ISM. Frontier questions that can be addressed with studies in this field are the complex interiors of massive stars and supernovae which are key agents in galactic dynamics and chemical evolution, the history of star-forming and supernova activity affecting our solar-system environment, and explorations of occulted and inaccessible regions of young stellar nurseries in our Galaxy.
Cite
@article{arxiv.0902.2494,
title = {Astrophysics with Radioactive Atomic Nuclei},
author = {R. Diehl and P. von Ballmoos and S. Boggs and A. Burkert and A. Chieffi and N. Gehrels and J. Greiner and D. H. Hartmann and G. Kanbach and G. Meynet and N. Prantzos and J. Ryan and F. K. Thielemann and H. Zinnecker},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:0902.2494},
year = {2009}
}
Comments
7 pages, white paper for US Nat.Acad.Sci. Decadal Survey "Astro2010"