70 research outputs found
Double giant resonances in deformed nuclei
We report on the first microscopic study of the properties of two-phonon
giant resonances in deformed nuclei. The cross sections of the excitation of
the giant dipole and the double giant dipole resonances in relativistic heavy
ion collisions are calculated. We predict that the double giant dipole
resonance has a one-bump structure with a centroid 0.8 MeV higher than twice
energy for the single giant dipole resonance in the reaction under
consideration. The width of the double resonance equals to 1.33 of that for the
single resonance.Comment: 5 pages, 2 postscript figure
Gamma-ray strength function and pygmy resonance in rare earth nuclei
The gamma-ray strength function for gamma energies in the 1-7 MeV region has
been measured for 161,162-Dy and 171,172-Yb using the (3-He,alpha gamma)
reaction. Various models are tested against the observed gamma-ray strength
functions. The best description is based on the Kadmenskii, Markushev and
Furman E1 model with constant temperature and the Lorentzian M1 model. A
gamma-ray bump observed at E_gamma=3 MeV is interpreted as the so-called pygmy
resonance, which has also been observed previously in (n,gamma) experiments.
The parameters for this resonance have been determined and compared to the
available systematics.Comment: 11 pages, including 4 figures and 2 table
Deuteron frozen spin polarized target for nd experiements at the VdG accelerator of Charles University
A frozen spin polarized deuteron target cooled by the 3He/4He dilution
refrigerator is described. Fully deuterated 1,2-propanediol was used as a
target material. Deuteron vector polarization about 40% was obtained for the
target in the shape of a cylinder of 2 cm diameter and 6 cm length. The target
is intended for a study of 3N interactions at the polarized neutron beam
generated by the Van de Graaff accelerator at the Charles University in Prague
Measurement of the beam-helicity asymmetry in photoproduction of π0η pairs on carbon, aluminum, and lead
The beam-helicity asymmetry was measured, for the first time, in photoproduction of
π0η pairs on carbon, aluminum, and lead, with the A2 experimental setup at MAMI. The results are compared to an earlier measurement on a free proton and to the corresponding theoretical calculations. The Mainz model is used to predict the beam-helicity asymmetry for the nuclear targets. The present results indicate that the photoproduction mechanism for π0η pairs on nuclei is similar to photoproduction on a free nucleon. This process is dominated by the D33 partial wave with the ηΔ(1232) intermediate state
T and F asymmetries in π0 photoproduction on the proton
The γp→π0p reaction was studied at laboratory photon energies from 425 to 1445 MeV with a transversely polarized target and a longitudinally polarized beam. The beam-target asymmetry F was measured for the first time and new high precision data for the target asymmetry T were obtained. The experiment was performed at the photon tagging facility of the Mainz Microtron (MAMI) using the Crystal Ball and TAPS photon spectrometers. The polarized cross sections were expanded in terms of associated Legendre functions and compared to recent predictions from several partial-wave analyses. The impact of the new data on our understanding of the underlying partial-wave amplitudes and baryon resonance contributions is discussed
First measurement of helicity-dependent cross sections in π0η photoproduction from quasi-free nucleons
The helicity-dependent cross sections for the photoproduction of
pairs have been measured for the first time. The experiment was performed at
the tagged photon facility of the Mainz MAMI accelerator with the combined
Crystal Ball - TAPS calorimeter. The experiment used a polarized deuterated
butanol target and a circularly polarized photon beam. This arrangement allowed
the (photon and target spin antiparallel) and
(parallel spins) components to be measured for quasi-free production of
pairs off protons and neutrons. The main finding is that the two
helicity components contribute identically, within uncertainties, for both
participant protons and neutrons. The absolute couplings for protons and
neutrons are also identical. This means that nucleon resonances contributing to
this reaction in the investigated energy range have almost equal
electromagnetic helicity couplings, and .
Identical couplings for protons and neutrons are typical for
resonances and identical and components are only possible
for states, which constrains possible contributions of nucleon
resonances.Comment: accepted for publication in Phys. Lett.
Measurement of the decay η′ →π0π0η at MAMI
An experimental study of the η′→π0π0η→6γ decay has been conducted with the best up-to-date statistical accuracy, by measuring η′ mesons produced in the γp→η′p reaction with the A2 tagged-photon facility at the Mainz Microtron, MAMI. The results obtained for the standard parametrization of the η′→π0π0η matrix element are consistent with the most recent results for η′→ππη decays, but have smaller uncertainties. The available statistics and experimental resolution allowed, for the first time, an observation of a structure below the π+π- mass threshold, the magnitude and sign of which, checked within the framework of the nonrelativistic effective-field theory, demonstrated good agreement with the cusp that was predicted based on the ππ scattering length combination, a0-a2, extracted from K→3π decays
First measurement using elliptically polarized photons of the double-polarization observable E for γp→pπ0 and γp→nπ+
We report the measurement of the helicity asymmetry E for the pπ0 and nπ+ final states using, for the first time, an elliptically polarized photon beam in combination with a longitudinally polarized target at the Crystal Ball experiment at MAMI. The results agree very well with data that were taken with a circularly polarized photon beam, showing that it is possible to simultaneously measure polarization observables that require linearly (e.g.,
G) and circularly polarized photons (e.g., E) and a longitudinally polarized target. The new data cover a photon energy range 270–1400 MeV for the pπ0 final state (230–842 MeV for the nπ+ final state) and the full range of pion polar angles, θ, providing the most precise measurement of the observable E. A moment analysis gives a clear observation of the pη
cusp in the pπ0 final state
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