3 research outputs found
Can Hyperfine Excitation explain the Observed Oscillation-Puzzle of Nuclear Orbital Electron Capture of Hydrogen-like Ions?
Modulated in time orbital electron capture (EC) decays have been observed
recently in stored H-like Pr and Pm ions.
Although, the experimental results are extensively discussed in literature, a
firm interpretation has still to be established. Periodic transitions between
the hyperfine states could possible lead to the observed effect. Both selected
nuclides decay to stable daughter nuclei via allowed Gamow-Teller transitions.
Due to the conservation of total angular momentum, the allowed EC decay can
only proceed from the hyperfine ground state of parent ions. In this work we
argue that periodic transitions to the excited hyperfine state (sterile) in
respect to the allowed EC decay ground state cannot explain the observed decay
pattern
New test of modulated electron capture decay of hydrogen-like 142Pm ions: Precision measurement of purely exponential decay
An experiment addressing electron capture (EC) decay of hydrogen-like 142Pm60+ions has been conducted at the experimental storage ring (ESR) at GSI. The decay appears to be purely exponential and no modulations were observed. Decay times for about 9000 individual EC decays have been measured by applying the single-ion decay spectroscopy method. Both visually and automatically analysed data can be described by a single exponential decay with decay constants of 0.0126(7)sâ1for automatic analysis and 0.0141(7)sâ1for manual analysis. If a modulation superimposed on the exponential decay curve is assumed, the best fit gives a modulation amplitude of merely 0.019(15), which is compatible with zero and by 4.9 standard deviations smaller than in the original observation which had an amplitude of 0.23(4)