ASTRONOMY WITH
RADIOACTIVITIES*
RESEARCH
RESULTS
&
COMMUNICATION,
and
INTERNATIONAL
WORKSHOPS
on
Nuclear
Astrophysics
- Workshops and
Conferences Series:
- Astronomy with
Radioactivities
- Astronomy
with
Radioactivities
VIII (tbd, Germany/France, 2013/14)
- Astronomy
with
Radioactivities
VII (Phillip Island, Australia, 2011) (-> Proceedings)
- Astronomy
with
Radioactivities
VI
(Ringberg,
Germany,
2008)
- Astronomy
with
Radioactivities
V
(Clemson,
USA,
2005)
- Astronomy
with
Radioactivities IV, and Filling the Sensitivity Gap: MeV Gamma-Ray
Telescopes
(Seeon, Germany, 2003)
- Astronomy
with
Radioactivities
III
(Ringberg,
Germany,
2001)
- Astronomy
with
Radioactivities
II
(Ringberg,
Germany,
1999)
- Astronomy
with
Radioactivities
I:
The
Radioactive
Galaxy
(Clemson,
USA, 1996)
- Nuclei
in
the
Cosmos
- Nuclear
Physics
in
Astrophysics (European Physics Society Conf. Series)
- Origin of Matter and Evolution
of Galaxies (OMEG; Japan)
- Presolar Grain
Workshops (WUST/CU)
- Workshops
within
the
Munich
Cluster
of
Excellence
"Origin
and Evolution of the
Universe", Research Area G
Origin of Elements
Heavier than Fe (Roberto Gallino's 70th Anniversary) Sep 2008
50 years of B2FH, Pasadena, Jul
2007
ECT Nuclear
Astrophysics Trento 2004
- Research
Communications: Experiments, Institutions, Databases & Projects:
- INTEGRAL, HETE, RHESSI
- Meteoritics
Analysis
Equipment
- ACE, Stardust,
- Chandra, Newton, RXTE, Suzaku,
- NuSTAR, NeXT, Simbol-X
- IAU Resources for
Stars and Stellar Evolution (commission 35)(stellar structure &
evolution, star & cluster catalogues, atomic and nuclear data,
chemical evolution models, tools)
Scope of
this Website
Astronomy with
radioactivities as a subfield of nuclear astrophysics
addresses the astrophysical potential of measurements of cosmic
radioactive isotopes. Since the first detection of a cosmic
radioactivity line back in the 60ies, almost 30 years of hard
experimental effort has helped to advance this field into an
astronomical regime of its own: Gamma-rays transmit radioactive decay
to the observer most directly, and radioisotopes are
most direct messengers from the nuclear processes in stellar interiors
and explosive environments. But radioactivities also encode cosmic-ray
history between sources and observations in near-earth space, and
solar-system
meteorites have been found to include traces of radioactive decay in
grains
which must have formed close to nucleosynthesis sites.
Experimental techniques of
today can image the sky in radioactivity
gamma-rays to a precision sufficient to perform correlation studies
with
other astronomical sources. Even the radioactive motors of supernovae
are
at the rim of measurement capabilities through decay gamma-rays from
shortlived
Ni and Co. Young supernova remnants may show radioactivity afterglows
from
Ti decay, X-ray recombination lines may map the distribution of ejecta.
Positrons produced from beta-unstable isotopes annihilate and produce a
gamma-ray spectrum with a signature characterizing the annihilation
environment.
Charged-particle detectors capture and analyze isotopic distributions
in
regions of the solar system which are remote from the earth magnetic
field
distortions. Precision isotopic analyses in laboratories of solar and
presolar
grains isolated from meteorites and ranging in size down to microns in
diameter has established a rich body of astronomical data.
Supplementing
these astronomical enterprises, radioactive-beam facilities have begun
to provide nuclear-reaction cross sections in previously unexplored
regimes
far from the isotope valley of stability, needed for explosive
nucleosynthesis. Furthermore, the evolution of computing facilities
makes even multi-dimensional hydrodynamical modeling of stars and
explosions with coupled large nuclear-reaction networks a feasible
perspective, thus helping our interpretation and models of cosmic
radioactivities.
At this website, we provide
links and information to workshops and
conferences in this field, and to a subset of results. Though we have
in mind a complete survey of the field, you should appreciate that our
selections will unavoidably be biased from our perspective of gamma-ray
astronomy.
[back to top of
page]
This page is maintained by Roland Diehl
improvement suggestions
and comments are welcome!
last update:- 10Mar2011