14 research outputs found
Could the GSI Oscillations be Observed in a Standard Electron Capture Decay Experiment?
The electron-capture decay of 180Re has been investigated to search for
oscillations in the decay probability as reported from a recent measurement at
GSI, Darmstadt. The production period was kept short compared to the reported
oscillation period. No such oscillation was observed, indicating that the
reported oscillations would not have been observable in a conventional
experiment with radioactive atoms in a solid environment but must have to do
with the unique conditions in the GSI experiment where hydrogen-like ions are
moving independently in a storage ring and decaying directly by a true two-body
decay to a long-lived (ground-) state. Our finding could restrict possible
theoretical interpretations of the oscillations.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure
Coulomb dissociation of N 20,21
Neutron-rich light nuclei and their reactions play an important role in the creation of chemical elements. Here, data from a Coulomb dissociation experiment on N20,21 are reported. Relativistic N20,21 ions impinged on a lead target and the Coulomb dissociation cross section was determined in a kinematically complete experiment. Using the detailed balance theorem, the N19(n,γ)N20 and N20(n,γ)N21 excitation functions and thermonuclear reaction rates have been determined. The N19(n,γ)N20 rate is up to a factor of 5 higher at
ARIEL begins a new future in rare isotopes
The superconducting electron linac for ARIEL, TRIUMF’s new flagship facility, has achieved its first accelerated beam
ISAC and ARIEL: the TRIUMF radioactive beam facilities and the scientific program
The TRIUMF Isotope Separator and Accelerator (ISAC) facility uses the isotope separation on-line (ISOL) technique to produce rare-isotope beams (RIB). The ISOL system consists of a primary production beam, a target/ion source, a mass separator, and beam transport system. The rare isotopes produced during the interaction of the proton beam with the target nucleus are stopped in the bulk of the target material. They diffuse inside the target material matrix to the surface of the grain and then effuse to the ion source where they are ionized to form an ion beam that can be separated by mass and then guided to the experimental facilities. Previously published in the journal Hyperfine Interactions
T-REX
Transfer reactions in inverse kinematics using the radioactive ion beams provided by the REX-ISOLDE facility at CERN are very good tools to gain insight into the single-particle properties of exotic nuclei. The new silicon particle detector setup T-REX, optimized for these transfer reactions, is presented in this article. T-REX consists of position sensitive ΔE-E telescopes in a compact configuration that covers up to 66% of the solid angle. The setup allows the identification of the light reaction products and the measurement of their angular distribution for a large range of polar angles. Simultaneous detection of the elastically scattered target-like nuclei enables the determination of the optical model parameters used in the analysis of the experiments