1,080 research outputs found
Comment on "First Observation of Ground State Dineutron Decay: 16Be"
A recent measurement [Spyrou et al., PRL 108, 102501 (2012)] of the in-flight
decay of 16Be into 14Be+n+n has been interpreted as the first case of dineutron
emission. Here we point out that the inclusion of the n-n interaction neglected
in the description of the direct three-body decay can generate strong
enhancements at low n-n relative energy and angle, as observed, without any
need to invoke dineutron decay.Comment: Final version, published in Physical Review Letter
Structure of Be probed via secondary beam reactions
The low-lying level structure of the unbound neutron-rich nucleus Be
has been investigated via breakup on a carbon target of secondary beams of
B at 35 MeV/nucleon. The coincident detection of the beam velocity
Be fragments and neutrons permitted the invariant mass of the
Be+ and Be++ systems to be reconstructed. In the case of
the breakup of B, a very narrow structure at threshold was observed in
the Be+ channel. Contrary to earlier stable beam fragmentation
studies which identified this as a strongly interacting -wave virtual state
in Be, analysis here of the Be++ events demonstrated that
this was an artifact resulting from the sequential-decay of the
Be(2) state. Single-proton removal from B was found to
populate a broad low-lying structure some 0.70 MeV above the neutron-decay
threshold in addition to a less prominent feature at around 2.4 MeV. Based on
the selectivity of the reaction and a comparison with (0-3)
shell-model calculations, the low-lying structure is concluded to most probably
arise from closely spaced J=1/2 and 5/2 resonances
(E=0.400.03 and 0.85 MeV), whilst the broad
higher-lying feature is a second 5/2 level (E=2.350.14 MeV). Taken
in conjunction with earlier studies, it would appear that the lowest 1/2
and 1/2 levels lie relatively close together below 1 MeV.Comment: 14 pages, 13 figures, 2 tables. Accepted for publication in Physical
Review
Cosmological Consequences of Nearly Conformal Dynamics at the TeV scale
Nearly conformal dynamics at the TeV scale as motivated by the hierarchy
problem can be characterized by a stage of significant supercooling at the
electroweak epoch. This has important cosmological consequences. In particular,
a common assumption about the history of the universe is that the reheating
temperature is high, at least high enough to assume that TeV-mass particles
were once in thermal equilibrium. However, as we discuss in this paper, this
assumption is not well justified in some models of strong dynamics at the TeV
scale. We then need to reexamine how to achieve baryogenesis in these theories
as well as reconsider how the dark matter abundance is inherited. We argue that
baryonic and dark matter abundances can be explained naturally in these setups
where reheating takes place by bubble collisions at the end of the strongly
first-order phase transition characterizing conformal symmetry breaking, even
if the reheating temperature is below the electroweak scale GeV. We
also discuss inflation as well as gravity wave smoking gun signatures of this
class of models.Comment: 22 pages, 7 figure
Emergence of the N=16 shell gap in 21O
The spectroscopy of O21 has been investigated using a radioactive O20 beam and the (d,p) reaction in inverse kinematics. The ground and first excited states have been determined to be Jπ=5/2+ and 1/2+, respectively. Two neutron unbound states were observed at excitation energies of 4.77(10) and 6.17(11) MeV. The spectroscopic factor deduced for the lower of these, interpreted as a 3/2+ level, reveals a relatively pure (60%) 0d3/2 single-particle configuration, in good agreement with shell-model calculations that predict O26 to be unbound. The large energy difference between the 3/2+ and 1/2+ states is indicative of the emergence of the N=16 shell gap, which is estimated to be 5.1(11) MeV. For the higher-lying resonance, which has a character consistent with a spin-parity assignment of 3/2+ or 7/2-, a 0.71(22) branching ratio to the first 2+ state in O20 has been observed.Unión Europea EURISOL 515768 RIDSNSF PHY-075809
Study of multi-neutron emission in the β-decay of 11Li
The kinematics of two-neutron emission following the β-decay of 11Li was investigated for the first time by detecting the two neutrons in coincidence and by measuring their angle and energy. An array of liquid-scintillator neutron detectors was used to reject cosmic-ray and γ-ray backgrounds by pulse-shape discrimination. Cross-talk events in which two detectors are fired by a single neutron
were rejected using a filter tested on the β-1n emitter 9Li. A large cross-talk rejection rate is obtained (> 95%) over most of the energy range of interest. Application
to 11Li data leads to a significant number of events interpreted as β-2n decay. A discrete neutron line at ≈ 2 MeV indicates sequential two-neutron emission, possibly
from the unbound state at 10.6 MeV excitation energy in 11Be
Experimental study of high-lying states in <sup>28</sup>Mg using the resonant elastic scattering of α particles
International audienceThe excitation function of Mg28 above the α-decay threshold has been measured for the first time using the resonant scattering of α particles with the technique of a thick target in inverse kinematics. Thirteen new states are reported between Ex=15.5 and Ex=20.5 MeV, and suggestions for spin-parity assignments are given for two of these. Calculations of the branching ratio to α decay for these states as well as comparison of the measured cross sections to calculations suggest that α+Neg.s.24 clustering is not dominant in this energy regime
Extrapolation of neutron-rich isotope cross-sections from projectile fragmentation
Using the measured fragmentation cross sections produced from the 48Ca and
64Ni beams at 140 MeV per nucleon on 9Be and 181Ta targets, we find that the
cross sections of unmeasured neutron rich nuclei can be extrapolated using a
systematic trend involving the average binding energy. The extrapolated
cross-sections will be very useful in planning experiments with neutron rich
isotopes produced from projectile fragmentation. The proposed method is general
and could be applied to other fragmentation systems including those used in
other radioactive ion beam facilities.Comment: accepted for publication in Europhysics Letter
Impermeability effects in three-dimensional vesicles
We analyse the effects that the impermeability constraint induces on the
equilibrium shapes of a three-dimensional vesicle hosting a rigid inclusion. A
given alteration of the inclusion and/or vesicle parameters leads to shape
modifications of different orders of magnitude, when applied to permeable or
impermeable vesicles. Moreover, the enclosed-volume constraint wrecks the
uniqueness of stationary equilibrium shapes, and gives rise to pear-shaped or
stomatocyte-like vesicles.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figure
Severe hereditary spherocytosis and distal renal tubular acidosis associated with the total absence of band 3
Absence of band 3, associated with the mutation Coimbra (V488M) in the homozygous state, caused severe hereditary spherocytosis in a young child. Although prenatal testing was made available to the parents, it was declined. Because the fetus stopped moving near term, an emergency cesarean section was performed and a severely anemic, hydropic female baby was delivered. She was resuscitated and initially kept alive with respiratory assistance and hypertransfusion therapy. Cord blood smears revealed erythroblastosis, poikilocytosis, and red cells with stalk-like elongations. Band 3 and protein 4.2 were absent; spectrin, ankyrin, and glycophorin A were significantly reduced. Renal tubular acidosis was detected by the age of 3 months. Nephrocalcinosis appeared soon thereafter. After 3 years of follow-up the child is doing reasonably well on a regimen that includes regular blood transfusions and daily bicarbonate supplements. The long-term prognosis remains uncertain given the potential for hematologic and renal complications
Emergence of the N=16 shell gap in ^(21)O
This is the publisher's version, also available electronically from http://journals.aps.org/prc/abstract/10.1103/PhysRevC.84.011301
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