SLIDE 1
Single-Particle Spectroscopy of 133 Sn via the (d,p) reaction in - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Single-Particle Spectroscopy of 133 Sn via the (d,p) reaction in - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Single-Particle Spectroscopy of 133 Sn via the (d,p) reaction in inverse kinematics Kate L. Jones University of Tennessee Shell model fingerprints on the galaxy Pfeiffer, Kratz, Thielemann and Walters, Nuc. Phys. A 693 282 (2001) The rapid
SLIDE 2
SLIDE 3
The rapid neutron capture (r-)process
Z N
(n,γ) (γ,n) β- decay large deviations in r-process path at shell closures
SLIDE 4
What we can learn from transfer reactions
- Q-value
- mass.
- excitation energies.
- Angular distributions of recoils
- l-value of transferred nucleon.
- combined with calculations gives spectroscopic
factor.
Q value (MeV) Counts
SLIDE 5
J.S. Thomas et al
- Phys. Rev. C 71, 021302 (2005)
- Phys. Rev. C 76, 044302 (2007)
HRIBF yields
N=82 Fission fragment beams Production via p-induced fission on U gives access to n-rich nuclei close to N=50,82
Opportunities at the HRIBF
N=50 Previous studies close to N = 50
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HRIBF yields
N=82 Fission fragment beams Production via p-induced fission on U gives access to n-rich nuclei close to N=50,82
Opportunities at the HRIBF
N=50 Current studies close to N = 82 and Z = 50 r-process close to shell closure Low level density Small capture cross section Statistical model not reliable Direct capture important
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16O
N = 82 Z = 50
124Sn
Stable Doubly magic
In Sb Neutron transfer e.g. (d,p), sensitive probe of single-particle
- structure. Can extract energies, l-values and spectroscopic
- factors. Reaction is selective.
Te
130Te 135Te 131Sn 133Sn
Transfer measurements around 132Sn
SLIDE 8
Magicity of 132Sn ?
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What is a Spectroscopic Factor?
Specific Example Nuclear Reaction Theory Nuclear Reaction Experiment
Ssj = Asj
2
usj(r) = Asjνsj(r)
Slsj
exp =
dσexp / dΩ dσDWBA / dΩ
11Be(g.s.) = A2s1/2 10 Be(g.s.)⊗ 2s1/2 + A 1d5/2 10 Be(2+)⊗1d5/2 + ...
where
Spectroscopic Amplitude s.p. radial overlap function Normalized WF
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132Sn(d,p) photo
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133Sn Q-value spectrum
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133Sn Angular Distributions
Theory from Filomena Nunes (NSCL)
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Ex (keV) Jπ Configuration SF C2 (fm-1) 7/2-
132Sngs ⊗ νf7/2
0.86 ± 0.16 0.64 ± 0.10 854 3/2-
132Sngs ⊗ νp3/2
0.92 ± 0.18 5.61 ± 0.86 1363±31 (1/2)-
132Sngs ⊗ νp1/2
1.1 ± 0.3 2.63 ± 0.43 2005 (5/2)-
132Sngs ⊗ νf5/2
1.1 ± 0.2 (9 ± 2)×10-4
Values for 133Sn
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Checking optical potentials
“local” optical potential from Strömich et al Phys. Rev C 16, 2193 (1977). “global” optical potentials: deuteron Lohr and Haeberli Nucl. Phys. A232 381 (1974). proton Varner et al.
- Phys. Rep 201 57
(1991).
SLIDE 15
Magicity of 132Sn
1 2 3 4 5
(a)
E2+ (MeV) 5
(b)
10 20
(c)
N-Nmagic S2n (MeV) 5
(d)
! "#!$ "%!$ &%$ '()%$ *+)%$ *#)%$ ,-)%$ '.)%$ !/&0$ !/-%$ #/#$ #/#$ #%0$ 1-)%$ 2.)%$ 3#)%$ !/-%$ 4##)%$ #/!($ 5#.)%$ !/0!$ !/.6$ !/.6$
(a) (c) (b)
Sn Pb
K.L. Jones et al. Nature 465 454 (2010)
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100 140 180 100 140 180 A A
130Sn Rate x 10 132Sn Rate x 10
Taken from J. Beun, et al J. Phys. G 36 025201 (2009)
Simulations of the r-process show global sensitivity to the 130Sn(n,γ) rate, in contrast to the 132Sn(n,γ) rate.
%age Abundance Change 30 20 10
- 30
- 20
- 10
%age Abundance Change 30 20 10
- 30
- 20
- 10
r-process sensitivity studies.
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100 140 180 100 140 180 A A
130Sn Rate x 10 132Sn Rate x 10
%age Abundance Change 30 20 10
- 30
- 20
- 10
%age Abundance Change 30 20 10
- 30
- 20
- 10
r-process sensitivity studies.
Build up of material at130Sn, due to long half life (4 min) compared to 130Cd and 130In (~ 1 sec). (n,γ)’s take material out
- f mass 130 into 131, and also soak up neutrons.
Taken from J. Beun, et al J. Phys. G 36 025201 (2009)
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FRDM HFB RMFT
130Sn
Cross section depends largely on predicted binding energies for 3p s. p.
- states. No s. p. states identified previously in 131Sn.
Direct Capture on 130Sn
Rauscher et al., PRC 57, 2031 (1998)
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4666(33) 4015(23) 3413(19) 2661(18) 131Sn* (keV)
2H(130Sn,p)131Sn
Fwd ORRUBA #1, MCP coinc., narrow TAC window
Previously unobserved p- wave states important to neutron direct capture at late times in r-process. Statistical errors in ( ). Systematic error: ~30 keV
- R. L. Kozub, 238th ACS National Meeting, 16 August 2009
Qgs= 3.022 MeV
Q-value for 130Sn(d,p)131Sn
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131Sn Preliminary angular distribution
131Sn(d,p)130Sn
4679(41) 4018(28) 3417(23) 2680(23)
131Sn
Prelim 1 5
131Sn Ex (MeV)
2 4 3
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Near-term future: fission fragments
(d,p) measurements: 126Sn and 128Sn
completing n-rich tin chain understanding systematics
(d,p) measurement on 80Ge
r-process sensitivity to nuclei to the west of the shell closure
Neutron transfer using (9Be,8Be) on 130Sn
pinning down the energies of states in 131Sn
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Where next - with HRIBF upgrade
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Thanks to …..
UT-Knoxville: K. Y. Chae, R. Kapler, Z. Ma, B. H. Moazen,
- K. T. Schmitt
TTU: R.L. Kozub, J. F. Shriner, Jr, S. V. Paulauskas,
- D. J. Sissom
ORNL:
- D. W. Bardayan, F. Liang,
- C. D. Nesaraja, D. Shapira, M. S. Smith
Rutgers U:
- J. A. Cizewski, R. Hatarik, S. D. Pain, P. D. O’Malley,
- W. A. Peters
LSU: J.C. Blackmon ORAU:
- C. Matei
Ohio U:
- A. Adekola
UND:
- J. J. Kolata, A. Roberts
- U. Mich.:
- A. M. Villano
Surrey:
- T. P. Swan, W. A. Catford, C. Harlin, N. Patterson,
- J. S. Thomas, S. M. Brown
CSM:
- K. Chipps, U. Greife, L. Erikson, R. J. Livesay
Furman:
- A. Gaddis
IFJ PAN:
- W. Krolas
EWU:
- K. I. Hahn
NSCL/MSU:
- F. Nunes