Forbidden electron capture on 24Na and 27Al in degenerate oxygen-neon cores
Abstract
Stars with an initial mass of 7-11 solar masses form degenerate oxygen-neon cores following carbon burning. Electron captures in such cores can trigger runaway oxygen burning, resulting in either a collapse or a thermonuclear explosion. We provide a detailed description of the formalism used in previous work and apply it to two further forbidden transitions that are relevant to degenerate oxygen-neon cores: the 4+g.s.→2+1 transition in 24Na(e-,e)24Ne and the 5/2+g.s. → 1/2+g.s. transition in 27Al(e-,e)27Mg. The relevant nuclear matrix elements are determined through shell model calculations and constraints from CVC theory. We then investigate the astrophysical impact using the stellar evolution code MESA and through timescale arguments. In the relevant temperature range, the forbidden transitions substantially reduce the threshold densities for 24Na(e-,e)24Ne and 27Al(e-,e)27Mg. In the MESA models, 24Na(e-,e)24Ne now occurs immediately following the onset of 24Mg(e-,e)24Na. The impact on the overall evolution is uncertain: this is due to known difficulties in accounting for convective instabilities triggered by the A=24 electron captures. The transition between 27Al and 27Mg may have a minor effect on the early evolution but is unlikely to affect the outcome. The studied transitions should be included when calculating weak interaction rates between 24Na and 24Ne for temperatures 10(T[K])8.5 and between 27Al and 27Mg for 10(T[K])8.8.
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