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Inverse-kinematics one-neutron pickup with fast rare-isotope beams

Authors :
D. Weisshaar
K. A. Walsh
R. Winkler
S. McDaniel
T. Baugher
Alexandra Gade
C. M. Campbell
G. F. Grinyer
S. R. Stroberg
K. Meierbachtol
J. A. Tostevin
B. A. Brown
D. Bazin
A. Ratkiewicz
T. Glasmacher
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
arXiv, 2011.

Abstract

New measurements and reaction model calculations are reported for single neutron pickup reactions onto a fast \nuc{22}{Mg} secondary beam at 84 MeV per nucleon. Measurements were made on both carbon and beryllium targets, having very different structures, allowing a first investigation of the likely nature of the pickup reaction mechanism. The measurements involve thick reaction targets and $\gamma$-ray spectroscopy of the projectile-like reaction residue for final-state resolution, that permit experiments with low incident beam rates compared to traditional low-energy transfer reactions. From measured longitudinal momentum distributions we show that the $\nuc{12}{C} (\nuc{22}{Mg},\nuc{23}{Mg}+\gamma)X$ reaction largely proceeds as a direct two-body reaction, the neutron transfer producing bound \nuc{11}{C} target residues. The corresponding reaction on the \nuc{9}{Be} target seems to largely leave the \nuc{8}{Be} residual nucleus unbound at excitation energies high in the continuum. We discuss the possible use of such fast-beam one-neutron pickup reactions to track single-particle strength in exotic nuclei, and also their expected sensitivity to neutron high-$\ell$ (intruder) states which are often direct indicators of shell evolution and the disappearance of magic numbers in the exotic regime.<br />Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....05ea9e7b773c34333328a110dbc7cbd8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1103.3849