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Solving the Puzzles of the Decay of the Heaviest Known Proton-Emitting Nucleus ^{185}Bi.

Authors :
Doherty DT
Andreyev AN
Seweryniak D
Woods PJ
Carpenter MP
Auranen K
Ayangeakaa AD
Back BB
Bottoni S
Canete L
Cubiss JG
Harker J
Haylett T
Huang T
Janssens RVF
Jenkins DG
Kondev FG
Lauritsen T
Lederer-Woods C
Li J
Müller-Gatermann C
Potterveld D
Reviol W
Savard G
Stolze S
Zhu S
Source :
Physical review letters [Phys Rev Lett] 2021 Nov 12; Vol. 127 (20), pp. 202501.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Two long-standing puzzles in the decay of ^{185}Bi, the heaviest known proton-emitting nucleus are revisited. These are the nonobservation of the 9/2^{-} state, which is the ground state of all heavier odd-A Bi isotopes, and the hindered nature of proton and α decays of its presumed 60-μs 1/2^{+} ground state. The ^{185}Bi nucleus has now been studied with the ^{95}Mo(^{93}Nb,3n) reaction in complementary experiments using the Fragment Mass Analyzer and Argonne Gas-Filled Analyzer at Argonne National Laboratory's ATLAS facility. The experiments have established the existence of two states in ^{185}Bi; the short-lived T_{1/2}=2.8_{-1.0}^{+2.3}  μs, proton- and α-decaying ground state, and a 58(2)-μs γ-decaying isomer, the half-life of which was previously attributed to the ground state. The reassignment of the ground-state lifetime results in a proton-decay spectroscopic factor close to unity and represents the only known example of a ground-state proton decay to a daughter nucleus (^{184}Pb) with a major shell closure. The data also demonstrate that the ordering of low- and high-spin states in ^{185}Bi is reversed relative to the heavier odd-A Bi isotopes, with the intruder-based 1/2^{+} configuration becoming the ground, similar to the lightest At nuclides.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1079-7114
Volume :
127
Issue :
20
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Physical review letters
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
34860042
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.127.202501