Zestaw obrazów 2019
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Link do spotkania w aplikacji Microsoft Teams: https://tiny.pl/xkgszhq2
Abstract
Observation of a threshold resonance and a new deuteron-deuteron fusion channel in accelerator experiments at extremely low energies
Konrad Czerski
Centre for Experimental Physics eLBRUS, Institute of Physics, University of Szczecin, Poland
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Direct observation of the deuteron-deuteron (DD) fusion reaction at thermal meV energies through the emission of its nuclear products, although theoretically possible, has not yet been realized. According to recent calculations, the electron screening effect, which reduces the repulsive Coulomb barrier between reacting nuclei in metal environments by several hundred eV, leads to significantly larger cross sections. They are additionally enhanced by the newly discovered threshold resonance in the compound nucleus 4He. This means that so-called cold fusion can be studied in the laboratory.
In this talk, I will present the results of measurements of the 2H(d,p)3H reaction performed on various deuterated metallic targets at energies below 1 keV using the ultrahigh vacuum accelerator at the University of Szczecin. The experimentally obtained yield of the 2H(d,p)3H reaction decreases by many orders of magnitude with decreasing beam energy and can be well described by the electron screening effect and the Jπ = 0+ threshold resonance in 4He. In the recent experiments, the decay of this resonance by emission of an e+e- pairs has also been observed for the first time, leading to the conclusion that this new reaction channel represents the strongest channel for DD fusion at energies below 5 keV.
Furthermore, at the lowest beam energies of several keV, the reaction yield reaches a constant value, leading to the formation of a so-called plateau. As indicated by the significantly increased energies of the emitted protons, this effect can be directly linked to thermal DD fusion. The theoretical model explains the experimental results by the formation of ion tracks in the target by the projectiles, where local temperatures reach values above the melting point, leading to enhanced deuteron diffusion. The nuclear reaction rate, taking into account the enhanced screening effect and the DD threshold resonance, agrees very well with the experimental data.
Research projects carried out at the IPPLM are funded by the Polish Ministry of Education and Science, the National Science Centre and by the European Commission within the framework of EUROfusion Consortium under grant agreement No 101052200. Financial support comes also from the International Atomic Energy Agency, European Space Agency and LaserLab Consortium as well as from the Fusion for Energy Agency.