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Creators/Authors contains: "Wagner, L"

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  1. The synthesis of heavy elements in supernovae is affected by low-energy ( n , p ) and ( p , n ) reactions on unstable nuclei, yet experimental data on such reaction rates are scarce. The SECAR (SEparator for CApture Reactions) recoil separator at FRIB (Facility for Rare Isotope Beams) was originally designed to measure astrophysical reactions that change the mass of a nucleus significantly. We used a novel approach that integrates machine learning with ion-optical simulations to find an ion-optical solution for the separator that enables the measurement of ( p , n ) reactions, despite the reaction leaving the mass of the nucleus nearly unchanged. A new measurement of the Fe 58 ( p , n ) Co 58 reaction in inverse kinematics with a 3.66 ± 0.12 MeV/nucleon Fe 58 beam (corresponding to 3.69 ± 0.12 MeV proton energy in normal kinematics) yielded a cross-section of 20.3 ± 6.3  mb and served as a proof of principle experiment for the new technique demonstrating its effectiveness in achieving the required performance criteria. This novel approach paves the way for studying astrophysically important ( p , n ) reactions on unstable nuclei produced at FRIB. Published by the American Physical Society2025 
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  2. Abstract Lifetimes of higher-lying states ($$2_2^+$$ 2 2 + and$$4_1^+$$ 4 1 + ) in$$^{16}$$ 16 C have been measured, employing the Gammasphere and Microball detector arrays, as key observables to test and refine ab initio calculations based on interactions developed within chiral Effective Field Theory. The presented experimental constraints to these lifetimes of$$\tau ({2_2^+}) = [\,244, 446]\,~\textrm{fs}$$ τ ( 2 2 + ) = [ 244 , 446 ] fs and$$\tau ({4_1^+}) = [\,1.8, 4]\,~\textrm{ps}$$ τ ( 4 1 + ) = [ 1.8 , 4 ] ps , combined with previous results on the lifetime of the$$2_1^+$$ 2 1 + state of$$^{16}$$ 16 C, provide a rather complete set of key observables to benchmark the theoretical developments. We present No-Core Shell-Model calculations using state-of-the-art chiral 2- (NN) and 3-nucleon (3N) interactions at next-to-next-to-next-to-leading order for both the NN and the 3N contributions and a generalized natural-orbital basis (instead of the conventional harmonic-oscillator single-particle basis) which reproduce, for the first time, the experimental findings remarkably well. The level of agreement of the new calculations as compared to the CD-Bonn meson-exchange NN interaction is notable and presents a critical benchmark for theory. 
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