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 DB: Mini-Symposium on CAGRA
9:00 AM–11:45 AM,
Thursday, October 25, 2018
Hilton
Room: Kohala 1
Chair: Nori Aoi, RCNP Osaka University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2018.HAW.DB.8
Abstract: DB.00008 : Nuclear structure studies of the heaviest actinides and super-heavy elements with the CAGRA array at the JAEA Tandem*
11:00 AM–11:15 AM
Presenter:
Riccardo Orlandi
(Japan Atomic Energy Agency)
Authors:
Riccardo Orlandi
(Japan Atomic Energy Agency)
Eiji Ideguchi
(RCNP, Osaka Univ.)
Michael P Carpenter
(Argonne Natl Lab)
Hiroyuki Makii
(Japan Atomic Energy Agency)
Katsuhisa Nishio
(Japan Atomic Energy Agency)
Kentaro Hirose
(Japan Atomic Energy Agency)
Masato Asai
(Japan Atomic Energy Agency)
Kazuaki Tsukada
(Japan Atomic Energy Agency)
Nori Aoi
(RCNP, Osaka Univ.)
Yong-De Fang
(IMP, China)
Minliang Liu
(IMP, China)
Shaofei Zhu
(Argonne Natl Lab)
Dariusz Seweryniak
(Argonne Natl Lab)
Filip G Kondev
(Argonne Natl Lab)
Torben Lauritsen
(Argonne Natl Lab)
Guangshun Li
(IMP, China)
The search for the “island of stability” (IoS) and the production of super-heavy elements is one of the main goals of nuclear research. Different models disagree on the location and extent of the spherical IoS, and a way to obtain information on the single-particle orbitals near the IoS is to study well-deformed, lighter nuclei around fermium and nobelium, which are poorly known. The deformation causes in fact the spherical single-particle states to split and states originating from high-lying spherical orbitals come close to the Fermi surface in these systems.
The exceptional availability of a radioactive 254Es target at the JAEA Tandem Accelerator in Tokai, Japan, provides an excellent opportunity to investigate the structure of these nuclei. By irradiating 254Es with heavy-ion beams, via Coulex and multi-nucleon transfer reactions, the γ-ray spectroscopy of neutron-rich isotopes of einsteinium (Z=99), fermium (Z=100), mendelevium (Z=101) and nobelium (Z=102) will be attempted. The γ-rays emitted by these isotopes will be detected using a compact array of 8 clover detectors from the CAGRA collaboration.
*We acknowledge support from JAEA Houga funds, JSPS KAKENHI Grant JP 17H02893 and National Natural Sciences Foundation of China (Grant No. 11775274)
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2018.HAW.DB.8
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