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 CM: Nuclear Structure A>140
7:00 PM–9:45 PM,
Wednesday, October 24, 2018
Hilton
Room: Queen's 6
Chair: Atsuko Odahara, Osaka University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2018.HAW.CM.1
Abstract: CM.00001 : Indirect Measurements of Radiative Capture Reactions on Lanthanides*
7:00 PM–7:15 PM
Presenter:
Craig S. Reingold
(Univ of Notre Dame)
Authors:
Craig S. Reingold
(Univ of Notre Dame)
Anna Simon
(Univ of Notre Dame)
Nathan M. Cooper
(Univ of Notre Dame)
Richard Hughes
(Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab)
Jason T. Burke
(Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab)
Kelly A. Chipps
(Oak Ridge Natl Lab)
Sean P. Burcher
(Univ of Tennessee, Knoxville)
Sunghoon Ahn
(Texas A&M Univ)
Drew T. Blankstein
(Univ of Notre Dame)
Jolie A. Cizewski
(Rutgers Univ)
Matthew Hall
(Univ of Notre Dame)
Shuya Ota
(Texas A&M Univ)
Antti Saastamoinen
(Texas A&M Univ)
Konrad Schmidt
(Michigan State Univ, NSCL)
Benjamin Schroeder
(Texas A&M Univ)
Sriteja Upadhyayula
(Texas A&M Univ)
Radiative capture and photodisintegration reactions of lanthanides involving neutrons are of particular importance to nuclear applications. Experimental constraints make direct measurements of these cross sections nontrivial. Therefore, it is essential to have a reliable method for predicting (γ,n) and (n,γ) cross sections. One alternative to direct a measurement in the mass and energy regions of interest is the surrogate method, which provides an indirect measurement for radiative capture reactions using a more feasible experiment that generates the desired compound nucleus. Surrogate measurements for 145,146Sm(n,γ) and 159,160Dy(n,γ) have been conducted using the LLNL Hyperion array at Texas A&M Univ. Cyclotron Institute. Hyperion is comprised of 12 HPGe clover detectors coupled to a segmented silicon telescope. Particle-γ coincidence data for (p,d) and (p,t) reactions on self-supporting 148Sm and 162Dy targets have been analyzed in collaboration with LLNL to extract nuclear structure information and γ-decay probabilities. Preliminary results will be presented.
*This work was supported by the NNSA under grants DE-NA-0003780 & DE-NA-0002132, LLNL contract DE-AC5207NA27344, Texas A&M Nuclear Physics grant DE-FG02-93ER40773, and by the NSF under grant PHYS-1430152 (JINA-CEE).
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2018.HAW.CM.1
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