Bulletin of the American Physical Society
Fall 2022 Meeting of the APS Division of Nuclear Physics
Volume 67, Number 17
Thursday–Sunday, October 27–30, 2022; Time Zone: Central Daylight Time, USA; New Orleans, Louisiana
Session JH: Nuclear Reactions: Heavy-Ions/Rare isotope Beams I
8:30 AM–10:18 AM,
Saturday, October 29, 2022
Hyatt Regency Hotel
Room: Celestin H
Chair: Wei Jia Ong, Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab
Abstract: JH.00001 : New Isotopes in Neutron Rich Hf-Lu Region via Fragmentation of 198Pt*
8:30 AM–8:42 AM
Presenter:
Kenny Haak
(Michigan State University)
Authors:
Kenny Haak
(Michigan State University)
Oleg Tarasov
(FRIB)
Partha Chowdhury
(University of Massachusetts Lowell)
Andrew Rogers
(University of Massachusetts Lowell)
Kartikeya Sharma
(University of Massachusetts Lowell)
Thomas Baumann
(FRIB)
Daniel Bazin
(FRIB)
P.C. Bender
(University of Massachusetts Lowell)
Jun Chen
(FRIB)
Alfredo Estrade
(Central Michigan University)
Michael A Famiano
(Western Michigan University)
Dan C Foulds-Holt
(University Massachusetts Lowell)
Naoki Fukuda
(Riken)
Alexandra Gade
(FRIB)
Tom Ginter
(FRIB)
Richard W Gohier
(Western Michigan University)
Marc Hausmann
(FRIB)
Daniel E Hoff
(Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory)
Ava Hill
(FRIB)
Levi Klankowski
(Western Michigan University)
Elaine Kwan
(FRIB)
Jing Li
(FRIB)
Sean Liddick
(FRIB)
Brenden R Longfellow
(Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory)
Stephanie M Lyons
(FRIB)
Chris Morse
(Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
Mauricio Portillo
(FRIB)
Daniel M Rhodes
(FRIB)
Andrea L Richard
(Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory)
S. Samaranayake
(Central Michigan University)
Bradley M Sherrill
(FRIB)
Mallory K Smith
(NSCL)
Mark Spieker
(FRIB)
Chandana Sumithrarachchi
(FRIB)
Hiroshi Suzuki
(Riken)
Kailong Wang
(Central Michigan Univ)
Sanjanee W Waniganeththi
(University of Massachusetts Lowell)
Dirk W Weisshaar
(FRIB)
S. Zhu
(Brookhaven National Laboratory)
A 86 MeV/u 198Pt beam was incident on both Beryllium and Nickel targets producing fragments that were separated with the A1900. A scintillator at the focal plane of the A1900 separator recorded the time of flight stop signal. The start signal, energy loss, position (strip detector), and total kinetic energy was measured with a pin diode telescope at the final dispersive focus of the S800 spectrograph. Once particle ID was complete, cross sections were calculated using LISE++ to estimate the transmission of each fragment through the A1900 + S800 setup.
Several new isotopes, details/methods of particle ID in an exotic heavy isotope region, and precision of cross section calculations will be discussed.
*NSCL, user facility of National Science Foundation (NSF) - NSF Grant: PHY-2012040U.S. Department of Energy under award No. DE-FG02-94ER40848(UML)
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