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Direct measurement of hexacontatetrapole, $\textbf{E6}$ {\gamma} decay from $^{\textbf{53m}}$Fe

Authors :
Palazzo, T.
Mitchell, A. J.
Lane, G. J.
Stuchbery, A. E.
Brown, B. A.
Reed, M. W.
Akber, A.
Coombes, B. J.
Dowie, J. T. H.
Eriksen, T. K.
Gerathy, M. S. M.
Kibédi, T.
Tornyi, T.
de Vries, M. O.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The only proposed observation of a discrete, hexacontatetrapole ($E6$) transition in nature occurs from the T$_{1/2}$ = 2.54(2)-minute decay of $^{53m}$Fe. However, there are conflicting claims concerning its $\gamma$-decay branching ratio, and a rigorous interrogation of $\gamma$-ray sum contributions is lacking. Experiments performed at the Australian Heavy Ion Accelerator Facility were used to study the decay of $^{53m}$Fe. For the first time, sum-coincidence contributions to the weak $E6$ and $M5$ decay branches have been firmly quantified using complementary experimental and computational methods. Agreement across the different approaches confirms the existence of the real $E6$ transition; the $M5$ branching ratio and transition rate have also been revised. Shell model calculations performed in the full $pf$ model space suggest that the effective proton charge for high-multipole, $E4$ and $E6$, transitions is quenched to approximately two-thirds of the collective $E2$ value. Correlations between nucleons may offer an explanation of this unexpected phenomenon, which is in stark contrast to the collective nature of lower-multipole, electric transitions observed in atomic nuclei.<br />Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, to be published in Physical Review Letters

Subjects

Subjects :
Nuclear Experiment

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2302.05544
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.130.122503