Bulletin of the American Physical Society
2021 Fall Meeting of the APS Division of Nuclear Physics
Volume 66, Number 8
Monday–Thursday, October 11–14, 2021; Virtual; Eastern Daylight Time
Session LG: Nuclear Structure : A = 70-100
2:00 PM–3:48 PM,
Wednesday, October 13, 2021
Room: Copley & Kenmore
Chair: Jun Chen, MSU
Abstract: LG.00009 : Study of beta-delayed multi-neutron emission of the neutron-rich Ga isotopes *
3:36 PM–3:48 PM
Presenter:
Rin N Yokoyama
(University of Tennessee)
Authors:
Rin N Yokoyama
(University of Tennessee)
Robert Grzywacz
(University of Tennessee)
Bertis C Rasco
(Oak Ridge National Lab)
Nathan Brewer
(Oak Ridge national laboratory)
Krzysztof Rykaczewski
(Oak Ridge National Laboratory)
Jose L Tain
(Instituto de Fisica Corpuscular, Valencia, Spain)
Iris Dillmann
(TRIUMF)
Shunji Nishimura
(RIKEN Nishina Center)
Deuksoon Ahn
(RIKEN Nishina Center)
Alfredo Estrade
(Central Michigan Univ)
Alejandro Algora
(Instituto de Fisica Corpuscular, Valencia, Spain)
James M Allmond
(Oak Ridge National Lab)
Jorge Agramunt
(Instituto de Fisica Corpuscular, Valencia, Spain)
Hidetada Baba
(RIKEN Nishina Center)
Sunghan Bae
(Seoul National University)
Carlo Bruno
(University of Edinburgh, UK)
Roger Caballero-Folch
(TRIUMF, Vancouver, Canada)
Francisco Calvino
(Universitat Polit\`{e}cnica de Catalunya, Spain)
Patrick Coleman-Smith
(STFC Daresbury Laboratory, UK)
Guillem Cortes
(Universitat Polit\`{e}cnica de Catalunya, Spain)
Tom Davinson
(University of Edinburgh, UK)
C\'{e}sar Domingo-Pardo
(Instituto de Fisica Corpuscular, Valencia, Spain)
Naoki Fukuda
(RIKEN Nishina Center)
Shintaro Go
(Kyushu University)
Christopher J. Griffin
(University of Edinburgh, UK)
Jeongsu Ha
(Seoul National University)
Oscar Hall
(University of Edinburgh, UK)
Laura Harkness-Brennan
(University of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK)
Joseph Heideman
(University of Tennessee)
Tadaaki Isobe
(RIKEN Nishina Center)
David Kahl
(University of Edinburgh, UK)
Marek Karny
(University of Warsaw, Poland)
Toshihiko Kawano
(Los Alamos National Laboratory)
Le Hong Khiem
(Vietnam Academy of Science and Technology)
Thomas T King
(Oak Ridge National Laboratory)
Gabor Kiss
(RIKEN Nishina Center)
Agnieszka Korgul
(University of Warsaw, Poland)
Shigeru Kubono
(Univ of Tokyo)
Marc Labiche
(STFC Daresbury Laboratory, UK)
Ian Lazarus
(STFC Daresbury Laboratory, UK)
Jenny H. C. Lee
(University of Hong Kong)
Johnson Liang
(McMaster University, Ontario, Canada)
Jiajian Liu
(University of Hong Kong)
Giuseppe Lorusso
(National Physical Laboratory Teddington, UK)
Miguel Madurga
(University of Tennessee)
Keishi Matsui
(University of Tokyo, Japan)
Krzysztof Miernik
(University of Warsaw, Poland)
Fernando Montes
(National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory Michigan State University)
Ana I. Morales
(Instituto de Fisica Corpuscular, Valencia, Spain)
Paul Morrall
(STFC Daresbury Laboratory, Daresbury, Warrington WA4 4AD, UK)
Neerajan Nepal
(Central Michigan Univ)
Robert D. Page
(University of Liverpool, UK)
Vi H. Phong
(VNU Hanoi University of Science, Viet Nam)
Monika Piersa
(University of Warsaw, Poland)
Mark Prydderch
(STFC Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, Harwell Campus, UK)
Vic F. E. Pucknell
(STFC Daresbury Laboratory, UK)
Mustafa M Rajabali
(Tennessee Tech University)
Berta Rubio
(Instituto de Fisica Corpuscular, Valencia, Spain)
Yukiya Saito
(TRIUMF, Canada)
Hiroyoshi Sakurai
(RIKEN Nishina Center)
Yohei Shimizu
(RIKEN Nishina Center)
John Simpson
(STFC Daresbury Laboratory, UK)
Maninder Singh
(University of Tennessee)
Daniel W Stracener
(Oak Ridge National Laboratory)
Toshiyuki Sumikama
(RIKEN Nishina Center)
Rebecca A Surman
(University of Notre Dame)
Hiroshi Suzuki
(RIKEN Nishina Center)
Hiroyuki Takeda
(RIKEN Nishina Center)
Ariel Tarife\~{n}o-Saldivia
(Universitat Polit\`{e}cnica de Catalunya, Spain)
Stephen L. Thomas
(STFC Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, Harwell Campus, UK)
Alvaro Tolosa-Delgado
(Instituto de Fisica Corpuscular, Valencia, Spain)
Marzena Wolinska-Cichocka
(Heavy Ion Laboratory University of Warsaw, Poland)
Phil Woods
(University of Edinburgh, UK)
Xin X. Xu
(University of Hong Kong)
Collaboration:
BRIKEN
Beta-delayed neutron emission probabilities ($P_{xn}$ ) are one of the essential inputs for the $r$-process nuclei abundance calculation since they can modify the isotopic population of the ${\rm \beta}$-decay path back to stability [1]. Although most of the exotic nuclei along the $r$-process path are expected to be multi-neutron emitters, experimental data of two or more neutron emission properties are almost non-existent.
One-neutron and two-neutron branching ratios ($P_{1n}$ and $P_{2n}$) were measured in the decay of $^{84-87}$Ga at the RI-beam Factory at the RIKEN Nishina Center using a high-efficiency array of He neutron counters, BRIKEN. We obtained the result suggesting that the competition between multi-neutron emission channels reduces the average number of neutrons compared to conventional predictions. (See Ref. [3] for detail.)
To explain the competition between multi-neutron emission channels, we combined shell-model calculations with Hauser-Feshbach statistical model calculation [4]. We found that the ($P_{1n}$, $P_{2n}$) and ${\rm \gamma}$-ray branching ratios are very sensitive to the level densities of the daughter nuclei. The statistical model reproduced the experimental branching ratios much more consistently when using the shell-model level densities than those based on the Gilbert-Cameron formula [5]. The result shows the importance of the gamma-neutron studies to benchmark the statistical model calculation.
[1] R. Surman {\it et al.}, JPS Conf. Proc. , 010010 (2015)
[2] P. Möller, B. Pfeiffer, and K.-L. Kratz, Phys. Rev. C 67, 055802 (2003).
[3] R. Yokoyama {\it et al.}, Phys. Rev. C 100, 031302(R) (2019)
[4] T. Kawano {\it et al.}, Nucl. Phys. A 913, 51 (2013).
[5] A. Gilbert and A. G. W. Cameron, Can. J. Phys. 43, 1446 (1965)
*This research was sponsored in part by the Office of Nuclear Physics, U.S. Department of Energy under Award No. DE-FG02-96ER40983 (UTK) and DEAC05--00OR22725 (ORNL)
Follow Us |
Engage
Become an APS Member |
My APS
Renew Membership |
Information for |
About APSThe American Physical Society (APS) is a non-profit membership organization working to advance the knowledge of physics. |
© 2024 American Physical Society
| All rights reserved | Terms of Use
| Contact Us
Headquarters
1 Physics Ellipse, College Park, MD 20740-3844
(301) 209-3200
Editorial Office
100 Motor Pkwy, Suite 110, Hauppauge, NY 11788
(631) 591-4000
Office of Public Affairs
529 14th St NW, Suite 1050, Washington, D.C. 20045-2001
(202) 662-8700