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Main Authors: Aliotta, Marialuisa, Boeltzig, Axel, Depalo, Rosanna, Gyürky, György
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.09735
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author Aliotta, Marialuisa
Boeltzig, Axel
Depalo, Rosanna
Gyürky, György
author_facet Aliotta, Marialuisa
Boeltzig, Axel
Depalo, Rosanna
Gyürky, György
contents For millennia, mankind has been fascinated by the marvel of the starry night sky. Yet, a proper scientific understanding of how stars form, shine, and die is a relatively recent achievement, made possible by the interplay of different disciplines as well as by significant technological, theoretical, and observational progress. We now know that stars are sustained by nuclear fusion reactions and are the furnaces where all chemical elements continue to be forged out of primordial hydrogen and helium. Studying these reactions in terrestrial laboratories presents serious challenges and often requires developing ingenious instrumentation and detection techniques. Here, we reveal how some of the major breakthroughs in our quest to unveil the inner workings of stars have come from the most unexpected of places: deep underground. As we celebrate 30 years of activity at the first underground laboratory for nuclear astrophysics, LUNA, we review some of the key milestones and anticipate future opportunities for further advances both at LUNA and at other underground laboratories worldwide.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2512_09735
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Exploring Stars in Underground Laboratories: Challenges and Solutions
Aliotta, Marialuisa
Boeltzig, Axel
Depalo, Rosanna
Gyürky, György
Nuclear Experiment
For millennia, mankind has been fascinated by the marvel of the starry night sky. Yet, a proper scientific understanding of how stars form, shine, and die is a relatively recent achievement, made possible by the interplay of different disciplines as well as by significant technological, theoretical, and observational progress. We now know that stars are sustained by nuclear fusion reactions and are the furnaces where all chemical elements continue to be forged out of primordial hydrogen and helium. Studying these reactions in terrestrial laboratories presents serious challenges and often requires developing ingenious instrumentation and detection techniques. Here, we reveal how some of the major breakthroughs in our quest to unveil the inner workings of stars have come from the most unexpected of places: deep underground. As we celebrate 30 years of activity at the first underground laboratory for nuclear astrophysics, LUNA, we review some of the key milestones and anticipate future opportunities for further advances both at LUNA and at other underground laboratories worldwide.
title Exploring Stars in Underground Laboratories: Challenges and Solutions
topic Nuclear Experiment
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.09735