167 research outputs found
Systematic trends in beta-delayed particle emitting nuclei: The case of beta-p-alpha emission from 21Mg
We have observed beta+-delayed alpha and p-alpha emission from the
proton-rich nucleus 21Mg produced at the ISOLDE facility at CERN. The
assignments were cross-checked with a time distribution analysis. This is the
third identified case of beta-p-alpha emission. We discuss the systematic of
beta-delayed particle emission decays, show that our observed decays fit
naturally into the existing pattern, and argue that the patterns are to a large
extent caused by odd-even effects.Comment: 6 pages, 5 figure
Second T = 3/2 state in B and the isobaric multiplet mass equation
Recent high-precision mass measurements and shell model calculations~[Phys.
Rev. Lett. {\bf 108}, 212501 (2012)] have challenged a longstanding explanation
for the requirement of a cubic isobaric multiplet mass equation for the lowest
isospin quartet. The conclusions relied upon the choice of the
excitation energy for the second state in B, which had two
conflicting measurements prior to this work. We remeasured the energy of the
state using the reaction and significantly disagree
with the most recent measurement. Our result supports the contention that
continuum coupling in the most proton-rich member of the quartet is not the
predominant reason for the large cubic term required for nuclei
Study of bound states in 12Be through low-energy 11Be(d,p)-transfer reactions
The bound states of 12Be have been studied through a 11Be(d,p)12Be transfer
reaction experiment in inverse kinematics. A 2.8 MeV/u beam of 11Be was
produced using the REX-ISOLDE facility at CERN. The outgoing protons were
detected with the T-REX silicon detector array. The MINIBALL germanium array
was used to detect gamma rays from the excited states in 12Be. The gamma-ray
detection enabled a clear identification of the four known bound states in
12Be, and each of the states has been studied individually. Differential cross
sections over a large angular range have been extracted. Spectroscopic factors
for each of the states have been determined from DWBA calculations and have
been compared to previous experimental and theoretical results
Beta-delayed proton emission from <sup>21</sup>Mg
16 pags.; 9 figs.; 6 tabs.© 2015, SIF, Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg. Beta-delayed proton emission from 21Mg has been measured at ISOLDE, CERN, with a detection setup consisting of two charged-particle telescopes surrounding the decay point. Altogether 27 βp branches were measured with center-of-mass energies between 0.4–7.2 MeV. Seven new βp branches were observed. Beta-delayed protons were used to determine the half-life of 21Mg as 118.6 ± 0.5 ms. From a line shape fit of the βp branches we extract the widths, spins, and parities of the resonances of 21Na. An improved interpretation of the decay scheme in accordance with the results obtained in reaction studies is presented.This work has been supported by the European Commision
within the Seventh Framework Programme “European Nuclear
Science and Applications Research”, contract no. 262010
(ENSAR), and by the Spanish research agency under number
FPA2012-32443.Peer Reviewe
Thermal neutron background at Laboratorio Subterráneo de Canfranc (LSC)
The thermal neutron background at Laboratorio Subterráneo de Canfranc (LSC) has been determined using several He proportional counter detectors. Bare and Cd shielded counters were used in a series of long measurements. Pulse shape discrimination techniques were applied to discriminate between neutron and gamma signals as well as other intrinsic contributions. Montecarlo simulations allowed us to estimate the sensitivity of the detectors and calculate values for the background flux of thermal neutrons inside Hall-A of LSC. The obtained value is (3.5±0.8)×10 n/cms, and is within an order of magnitude compared to similar facilities.This work was supported partially by the Spanish Ministerio de
Ciencia e Innovación and its Plan Nacional de I+D+i de Física de
Partículas projects: FPA2016-76765-P and FPA2018-096717-B-C21.
The authors want to acknowledge the help provided by the staff at LSC
in the preparation and support for this work
Reaction of the halo nucleus be on heavy targets at energies around the coulomb barrier
Presented at the XXXIII Mazurian Lakes Conference on Physics, Piaski, Poland, September 1–7, 2013.-- et al.New data for the reaction 11Be on 197Au at E lab = 31:9 MeV are presented. The angular distributions of the inelastically scattered 11Be and the 10Be fragments coming from the 11Be dissociation have been extracted and compared with semiclassical and coupled-channels calculations in an angular range θlab = 13deg;-46deg; for the detected Be fragment.This work was supported by the Spanish Government under the projects FPA2009-07387, FPA2009-07653, FPA2009-08848, FPA2012-32443 and Consolider
CPAN CSD2007-00042; the Helmholtz Association (HGT) through the Nuclear Astrophysics Virtual Institute (VH-VI-417); ATI Sistemas;
a Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada grant. TRIUMF receives federal funding via a contribution agreement through the National Research Council of Canada.Peer Reviewe
CLYC as a neutron detector in low background conditions
We report on the thermal neutron flux measurements carried out at the Laboratorio Subterráneo de Canfranc (LSC) with two commercial 2 × 2 CLYC detectors. The measurements were performed as part of an experimental campaign at LSC with He detectors, for establishing the sensitivity limits and use of CLYCs in low background conditions. A careful characterization of the intrinsic α and γ -ray background in the detectors was required and done with dedicated measurements. It was found that the α activities in the two CLYC crystals differ by a factor of three, and the use of Monte Carlo simulations and a Bayesian unfolding method allowed us to determine the specific α activities from the U and Th decay chains. The simulations and unfolding also revealed that the γ -ray background registered in the detectors is dominated by the intrinsic activity of the components of the detector such as the aluminum housing and photo-multiplier and that the activity within the crystal is low in comparison. The data from the neutron flux measurements with the two detectors were analyzed with different methodologies: one based on an innovative α /neutron pulse shape discrimination method and one based on the subtraction of the intrinsic α background that masks the neutron signals in the region of interest. The neutron sensitivity of the CLYCs was calculated by Monte Carlo simulations with MCNP6 and GEANT4. The resulting thermal neutron fluxes are in good agreement with complementary flux measurement performed with He detectors, but close to the detection limit imposed by the intrinsic α activity
α Clustering in Si 28 probed through the identification of high-lying 0+ states
Background: Aspects of the nuclear structure of light α-conjugate nuclei have long been associated with nuclear clustering based on α particles and heavier α-conjugate systems such as C12 and O16. Such structures are associated with strong deformation corresponding to superdeformed or even hyperdeformed bands. Superdeformed bands have been identified in Ca40 and neighboring nuclei and find good description within shell model, mean-field, and α-cluster models. The utility of the α-cluster description may be probed further by extending such studies to more challenging cases comprising lighter α-conjugate nuclei such as Mg24, Si28, and S32. Purpose: The purpose of this study is to look for the number and energy of isoscalar 0+ states in Si28. These states are the potential bandheads for superdeformed bands in Si28 corresponding to the exotic structures of Si28. Of particular interest is locating the 0+ bandhead of the previously identified superdeformed band in Si28. Methods: α-particle inelastic scattering from a Sinat target at very forward angles including 0 has been performed at the iThemba Laboratory for Accelerator-Based Sciences in South Africa. Scattered particles corresponding to the excitation energy region of 6 to 14 MeV were momentum-analysed in the K600 magnetic spectrometer and detected at the focal plane using two multiwire drift chambers and two plastic scintillators. Results: Several 0+ states have been identified above 9 MeV in Si28. A newly identified 9.71 MeV 0+ state is a strong candidate for the bandhead of the previously discussed superdeformed band. The multichannel dynamical symmetry of the semimicroscopic algebraic model predicts the spectrum of the excited 0+ states. The theoretical prediction is in good agreement with the experimental finding, supporting the assignment of the 9.71-MeV state as the bandhead of a superdeformed band. Conclusion: Excited isoscalar 0+ states in Si28 have been identified. The number of states observed in the present experiment shows good agreement with the prediction of the multichannel dynamical symmetry
Scattering of the Halo Nucleus 11Be on 197Au at Energies around the Coulomb Barrier
Angular distributions of the elastic, inelastic, and breakup cross sections of the halo nucleus 11Be on197 Au were measured at energies below (Elab =31.9 MeV) and around (39.6 MeV) the Coulomb barrier. These three channels were unambiguously separated for the first time for reactions of 11Be on a high-Z target at low energies. The experiment was performed at TRIUMF (Vancouver, Canada). The differential cross sections were compared with three different calculations: semiclassical, inert-core continuum-coupled-channels and continuum-coupled-channels ones with including core deformation. These results show conclusively that the elastic and inelastic differential cross sections can only be accounted for if core-excited admixtures are taken into account. The cross sections for these channels strongly depend on the β (E1) distribution in 11Be, and the reaction mechanism is sensitive to the entanglement of core and halo degrees of freedom in 11Be.Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad FPA2015-64969-P, FIS2014-53448-C2-1-P, FPA2013-47327-c02-01-R, FPA2012-32443, FIS2013-41994-PCentro Nacional de Física de Partículas, Astropartículas y Nuclear CSD2007- 00042European Collaborative Research EUI-2009-04162European Unions 654002Nuclear Astrophysics Virtual Institute VH-VI-417European Commission, Seventh Framework Program 60037
Study of proton-unbound states in relevant for the reaction in novae
Background: The nucleosynthesis of several proton-rich nuclei is determined
by radiative proton-capture reactions on unstable nuclei in nova explosions.
One such reaction is , which links the
NeNa and MgAl cycles in oxygen-neon (ONe) novae.
Purpose: To extract resonance
strengths from a study of proton-unbound states in , produced
via the Mg(He,) reaction.
Methods: A beam of ions at 50.7 MeV was used to produce
the states of interest in Al. Proton-triton angular correlations were
measured with a QDD magnetic spectrometer and a silicon detector array,
located at iThemba LABS, South Africa.
Results: We measured the excitation energies of the four lowest
proton-unbound states in Al and place lower-limits on
values for these four states. Together with USD-C shell-model calculations of
partial gamma widths, the experimental data are also used to determine
resonance strengths for the three lowest
resonances.
Conclusions: The energy of the dominant first
resonance is determined to be keV, with a resonance
strength meV
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