Bulletin of the American Physical Society
5th Joint Meeting of the APS Division of Nuclear Physics and the Physical Society of Japan
Volume 63, Number 12
Tuesday–Saturday, October 23–27, 2018; Waikoloa, Hawaii
Session 2WJA: Surrogate Techniques for Neutron-induced Reactions on Radioactive Nuclei for Fundamental and Applied Nuclear Science I
2:00 PM–4:00 PM,
Tuesday, October 23, 2018
Hilton
Room: Kona 5
Chair: Jolie Cizewski, Rutgers Univesity
Abstract ID: BAPS.2018.HAW.2WJA.3
Abstract: 2WJA.00003 : Demonstrating the (d,p) Reaction as a Surrogate for (n,γ)*
3:00 PM–3:30 PM
Presenter:
Andrew Ratkiewicz
(Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab)
Author:
Andrew Ratkiewicz
(Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab)
Neutron-capture reactions are important to stellar nucleosynthesis and for societal applications. However, direct measurements of the (n,γ) reaction cross section on these exotic nuclei are very challenging or impossible. The difficulty in directly determining the (n,γ) reaction cross section has motivated the development of several indirect techniques for constraining it, one of which is the Surrogate Reactions Method. This method indirectly determines the AZ(n,γ)A+1Z cross section by measuring the decay of the compound nucleus formed in the X(a,c)A+1Z reaction. However, the accuracy of previous attempts to extracting an (n,γ) cross section from surrogate measurements have been limited by their inability to account for differences in the entry spin distribution between the surrogate and desired reactions. The (d,p) reaction is a promising candidate for an (n,γ) surrogate reaction from a theoretical and an experimental perspective. Recently, a new description of the d+A reaction has been developed [1] which enables the determination of the entry spin-parity distribution of the compound nucleus formed in a (d,p) reaction as a function of excitation energy. This description of the (d,p) reaction was used with a new method for constraining the parameters of a Hauser-Feshbach calculation through fits to experimental data [2]. The method has been used to describe the 95Mo(n,γ) reaction; the extracted cross sections are in excellent agreement with data. I will summarize these efforts and show results.
[1] G. Potel, F. M. Nunes, and I. J. Thompson Phys. Rev. C 92, 034611 (2015)
[2] J. E. Escher et al. EPJ Web of Conf. 122, 12001 (2016)
[3] A.R. De L. Musgrove, B. Allen, J. Boldeman, and R. Macklin Nucl. Phys. A 270, 108 (1976)
*This work was supported in part by U.S. DOE NNSA under SSAA program, NNSA Grants DE-FG52-09NA29467 & DE-NA0000979 & LLNL Contract DE-AC52-07NA27344 & LDRD 16-ERD-022, and the Office of Nuclear Physics.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2018.HAW.2WJA.3
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