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Title: Isotope abundance of {sup 180}Ta{sup m} and p-process nucleosynthesis

Journal Article · · Physical Review. C, Nuclear Physics
;  [1]
  1. Department of Applied Physics, Curtin University of Technology, GPO Box U1987, Perth, Western Australia 6845 (Australia)

The p-process of stellar nucleosynthesis produces the stable neutron-deficient nuclides heavier than the iron peak elements. An accurate determination of the isotopic composition of tantalum is required to enable p-process nucleosynthetic calculations to be evaluated in terms of an accurate isotope abundance for {sup 180}Ta. This odd-odd nuclide has the remarkable property of having a long-lived isomeric state and a short-lived ground state, so that in reality one is measuring the isotope abundance of {sup 180}Ta{sup m}, which is a unique situation in nature. {sup 180}Ta{sup m} is the rarest isotope of nature's rarest element and is therefore an important isotope in deciphering the origin of the p-process. Because the isotopic composition of tantalum has only been measured on two occasions with relatively large uncertainties, an accurate determination is required to provide a better basis for p-process production calculations. A thermal ionization mass spectrometer was used to measure the isotope abundance of {sup 180}Ta{sup m} with high precision. The linearity of this instrument was verified by measuring the isotopically certified reference material for potassium (NIST 985), whose isotopes span a wide range of isotope ratios. The abundance sensitivity of the mass spectrometer for the measured ion beams has been examined to ensure the absence of tailing effects and interfering isotopes. These procedures are essential because of the extremely low isotope abundance of {sup 180}Ta{sup m}. The isotope fractionation of the tantalum isotopes was estimated by reference to the isotope fractionation of the isotopically certified reference material for rhenium (NIST 989). The isotopic composition of tantalum has been determined to be {sup 181}Ta/{sup 180}Ta{sup m}=8325 {+-} 43, which gives isotope abundances for {sup 180}Ta{sup m}=0.0001201 {+-} 0.0000008 and {sup 181}Ta=0.9998799 {+-} 0.0000008. This gives a Solar System abundance of {sup 180}Ta{sup m} of 2.49 x 10{sup -6} with reference to silicon=10{sup 6}. These isotope abundances, together with the relative atomic masses, give an atomic weight for tantalum of 180.947878 {+-} 0.000002.

OSTI ID:
20698933
Journal Information:
Physical Review. C, Nuclear Physics, Vol. 72, Issue 2; Other Information: DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevC.72.025801; (c) 2005 The American Physical Society; Country of input: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA); ISSN 0556-2813
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English

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