Bulletin of the American Physical Society
2025 Annual Meeting of the APS Four Corners Section
Friday–Saturday, October 10–11, 2025; University of Northern Colorado, Greeley, Colorado
Session N01: Nuclear/Particle Physics III
9:00 AM–10:12 AM,
Saturday, October 11, 2025
University Center
Room: Longs Peak
Chair: Jonathan Cornell, Weber State University
Abstract: N01.00004 : Study of the β-delayed neutron emissions of 11Li using the DESCANT and GRIFFIN arrays at TRIUMF*
9:36 AM–9:48 AM
Presenter:
Akanksha Rajesh Singh
(Colorado School of Mines)
Authors:
Akanksha Rajesh Singh
(Colorado School of Mines)
Sonja Mayotte
(Colorado School of Mines)
Frederic Sarazin
(Colorado School of Mines)
Vinzenz Bildstein
(University of Guelph)
Adam B Garnsworthy
(TRIUMF)
Paul E Garrett
(University of Guelph)
Corina Andreoiu
(Simon Fraser University)
Abraham Avaa
(TRIUMF)
Gordon C Ball
(TRIUMF)
Maeve Cockshutt
(University of Victoria)
Robin Coleman
(University of Guelph)
Iris Dillmann
(TRIUMF)
Sarah Dubé
(TRIUMF)
Fatima Garcia
(Simon Fraser University)
Christopher Griffin
(TRIUMF)
Madeleine Hanley
(Colorado School of Mines)
Desislava N Kalaydjieva
(University of Guelph)
Jizhong Liu
(TRIUMF)
Ben Marlow
(TRIUMF)
Luke Mantle
(TRIUMF)
Konstantin R Mashtakov
(University of Guelph)
Javier R Murias
(TRIUMF)
Silvia Murillo
(TRIUMF)
Sunday Olorunfunmi
(Instituto de Física, Universidade de São)
Collaborations:
GRIFFIN, DESCANT
Alternatively, 11Li a 2n halo nucleus with a large β-2n decay probability, may provide higher statistics to study 2n emissions, albeit with a complex mixture of sequential and simultaneous emission. At TRIUMF, we used the GRIFFIN γ-ray and DESCANT neutron detector arrays to study 1n and 2n emissions following the β-decay of 11Li. Our goal is to clarify discrepancies in β-1n spectrum measured in previous studies and to study possible 2n pathways. I will present the β-delayed 1n and 2n spectra using a simple cross-talk rejection model and demonstrate how β–γ–n coincidences can also be used to identify specific decay paths.
*This work is partly funded by DOE grant DE-FG02-93ER40789 (Colorado School of Mines). The GRIFFIN infrastructure is jointly funded by Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI), BritishColumbia Knowledge Development Fund (BCKDF), Ontario Ministry of Research and Innovation (ON-MRI), TRIUMF and University of Guelph. Ongoing maintenance and operation at GRIFFIN is funded through a Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) subatomic physics grant. DESCANT is supported by NSERC and CFI. TRIUMF receives federal funding via an agreement through National Research Council Canada (NRC).
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