Cargando…

The origin of the elements and other implications of gravitational wave detection for nuclear physics

The neutron-star collision revealed by the event GW170817 gave us a first glimpse of a possible birthplace of most of our heavy elements. The multi-messenger nature of this historical event combined gravitational waves, a gamma-ray burst and optical astronomy of a “kilonova”, bringing the first obse...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Lunney, David
Publicado: 2020
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1051/fopen/2020014
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2748796
_version_ 1780968992841662464
author Lunney, David
author_facet Lunney, David
author_sort Lunney, David
collection CERN
description The neutron-star collision revealed by the event GW170817 gave us a first glimpse of a possible birthplace of most of our heavy elements. The multi-messenger nature of this historical event combined gravitational waves, a gamma-ray burst and optical astronomy of a “kilonova”, bringing the first observations of rapid neutron capture (r process) nucleosynthesis after 60 years of speculation. Modeling the r process requires a prodigious amount of nuclear-physics ingredients: practically all the quantum state and interaction properties of virtually all neutron-rich nuclides, many of which may never be produced in the laboratory! Another essential contribution of nuclear physics to neutron stars (and their eventual coalescence) is the equation of state (EoS) that defines their structure and composition. The EoS, combined with the knowledge of nuclear binding energies, determines the elemental profile of the outer crust of a neutron star and the relationship between its radius and mass. In addition, the EoS determines the form of the gravitational wave signal. This article combines a tutorial presentation and bibliography with recent results that link nuclear mass spectrometry to gravitational waves via neutron stars.
id cern-2748796
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
publishDate 2020
record_format invenio
spelling cern-27487962022-06-30T11:48:10Zdoi:10.1051/fopen/2020014 http://cds.cern.ch/record/2748796Lunney, DavidThe origin of the elements and other implications of gravitational wave detection for nuclear physicsThe neutron-star collision revealed by the event GW170817 gave us a first glimpse of a possible birthplace of most of our heavy elements. The multi-messenger nature of this historical event combined gravitational waves, a gamma-ray burst and optical astronomy of a “kilonova”, bringing the first observations of rapid neutron capture (r process) nucleosynthesis after 60 years of speculation. Modeling the r process requires a prodigious amount of nuclear-physics ingredients: practically all the quantum state and interaction properties of virtually all neutron-rich nuclides, many of which may never be produced in the laboratory! Another essential contribution of nuclear physics to neutron stars (and their eventual coalescence) is the equation of state (EoS) that defines their structure and composition. The EoS, combined with the knowledge of nuclear binding energies, determines the elemental profile of the outer crust of a neutron star and the relationship between its radius and mass. In addition, the EoS determines the form of the gravitational wave signal. This article combines a tutorial presentation and bibliography with recent results that link nuclear mass spectrometry to gravitational waves via neutron stars.oai:cds.cern.ch:27487962020
spellingShingle Lunney, David
The origin of the elements and other implications of gravitational wave detection for nuclear physics
title The origin of the elements and other implications of gravitational wave detection for nuclear physics
title_full The origin of the elements and other implications of gravitational wave detection for nuclear physics
title_fullStr The origin of the elements and other implications of gravitational wave detection for nuclear physics
title_full_unstemmed The origin of the elements and other implications of gravitational wave detection for nuclear physics
title_short The origin of the elements and other implications of gravitational wave detection for nuclear physics
title_sort origin of the elements and other implications of gravitational wave detection for nuclear physics
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1051/fopen/2020014
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2748796
work_keys_str_mv AT lunneydavid theoriginoftheelementsandotherimplicationsofgravitationalwavedetectionfornuclearphysics
AT lunneydavid originoftheelementsandotherimplicationsofgravitationalwavedetectionfornuclearphysics