20 research outputs found

    A novel transparent charged particle detector for the CPET upgrade at TITAN

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    The detection of an electron bunch exiting a strong magnetic field can prove challenging due to the small mass of the electron. If placed too far from a solenoid's entrance, a detector outside the magnetic field will be too small to reliably intersect with the exiting electron beam because the light electrons will follow the diverging magnetic field outside the solenoid. The TITAN group at TRIUMF in Vancouver, Canada, has made use of advances in the practice and precision of photochemical machining (PCM) to create a new kind of charge collecting detector called the "mesh detector." The TITAN mesh detector was used to solve the problem of trapped electron detection in the new Cooler PEnning Trap (CPET) currently under development at TITAN. This thin array of wires etched out of a copper plate is a novel, low profile, charge agnostic detector that can be made effectively transparent or opaque at the user's discretion.Comment: 6 Pages. 6 Figures. Submitted to Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section A: Accelerators, Spectrometers, Detectors and Associated Equipmen

    Mass Measurements of Neutron-Rich Gallium Isotopes Refine Production of Nuclei of the First r-Process Abundance Peak in Neutron Star Merger Calculations

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    We report mass measurements of neutron-rich Ga isotopes 80−85^{80-85}Ga with TRIUMF's Ion Trap for Atomic and Nuclear science (TITAN). The measurements determine the masses of 80−83^{80-83}Ga in good agreement with previous measurements. The masses of 84^{84}Ga and 85^{85}Ga were measured for the first time. Uncertainties between 25−4825-48 keV were reached. The new mass values reduce the nuclear uncertainties associated with the production of A ≈\approx 84 isotopes by the \emph{r}-process for astrophysical conditions that might be consistent with a binary neutron star (BNS) merger producing a blue kilonova. Our nucleosynthesis simulations confirm that BNS merger may contribute to the first abundance peak under moderate neutron-rich conditions with electron fractions Ye=0.35−0.38Y_e=0.35-0.38

    High-precision QEC-value measurement of the superallowed β+ emitter 22Mg and an ab initio evaluation of the A = 22 isobaric triplet

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    A direct QECQ_{EC}-value measurement of the superallowed β+\beta^+ emitter 22^{22}Mg was performed using TRIUMF's Ion Trap for Atomic and Nuclear science (TITAN). The direct ground-state to ground-state atomic mass difference between 22^{22}Mg and 22^{22}Na was determined to be QEC=4781.40(22)Q_{EC}=4781.40(22)~keV, representing the most precise single measurement of this quantity to date. In a continued push towards calculating superallowed isospin-symmetry-breaking (ISB) corrections from first principles, ab-initio shell-model calculations of the A=22A=22 IMME are also presented for the first time using the valence-space in-medium similarity renormalization group formalism. With particular starting two- and three-nucleon forces, this approach demonstrates a level of agreement with the experimental data that suggests reliable ab-initio calculations of superallowed ISB corrections are now possible

    Precision mass measurements of 125–127Cd isotopes and isomers approaching the N = 82 closed shell

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    We present the results of precision mass measurements of neutron-rich cadmium isotopes. These nuclei approach the N=82N=82 closed neutron shell and are important to nuclear structure as they lie near doubly-magic 132^{132}Sn on the chart of nuclides. Of particular note is the clear identification of the ground state mass in 127^{127}Cd along with the isomeric state. We show that the ground state identified in a previous mass measurement which dominates the mass value in the Atomic Mass Evaluation is an isomeric state. In addition to 127/m^{127/m}Cd, we present other cadmium masses measured (125/m^{125/m}Cd and 126^{126}Cd) in a recent TITAN experiment at TRIUMF. Finally, we compare our measurements to new \emph{ab initio} shell-model calculations and comment on the state of the field in the N=82N=82 region.Comment: 8 Pages with citations, 3 Figures, 2 Table

    Quenching of the N=32 neutron shell closure studied via precision mass measurements of neutron-rich vanadium isotopes

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    We performed the first direct mass measurements of neutron-rich vanadium 52–55V isotopes passing the N=32 neutron shell closure with TRIUMF's Ion Trap for Atomic and Nuclear science. The new direct measurements confirm all previous indirect results. Through a reduced uncertainty of the mass of 55V we confirm the quenching of the N=32 neutron shell closure in vanadium. We discuss the evolution of the N=32 neutron shell closure between K and Cr and show similar signatures in the half-life surface when studied along the isotopic chains

    Dawning of the N=32 shell closure seen through precision mass measurements of neutron-rich titanium isotopes

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    A precision mass investigation of the neutron-rich titanium isotopes 51−55^{51-55}Ti was performed at TRIUMF's Ion Trap for Atomic and Nuclear science (TITAN). The range of the measurements covers the N=32N=32 shell closure and the overall uncertainties of the 52−55^{52-55}Ti mass values were significantly reduced. Our results confirm the existence of a weak shell effect at N=32N=32, establishing the abrupt onset of this shell closure. Our data were compared with state-of-the-art \textit{ab-initio} shell model calculations which, despite very successfully describing where the N=32N=32 shell gap is strong, overpredict its strength and extent in titanium and heavier isotones. These measurements also represent the first scientific results of TITAN using the newly commissioned Multiple-Reflection Time-of-Flight Mass Spectrometer (MR-TOF-MS), substantiated by independent measurements from TITAN's Penning trap mass spectrometer
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