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Beta Decay of Neutron-Rich Nuclei Near <sup>60</sup>Ca

ORAL

Abstract

Isotopes in the vicinity of the neutron dripline near 60Ca are valuable for providing information on the dripline and the neutron-rich region near magic number Z = 20. These nuclei were produced at the National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory via fragmentation of a 140MeV/u 82Se beam impinging on a 9Be target. The isotopes were separated in the A1900 and identified, event-by-event, by measuring energy loss and time-of-flight. They were then implanted in a double-sided silicon strip detector, with high and low gain outputs, to allow for investigation of the β-decay half-lives. Two high-purity germanium detectors were used to search for excited states in the daughter nuclei. Preliminary results will be reported.

Presenters

  • Elizabeth Rubino

    NSCL Cyclotron Lab

Authors

  • Elizabeth Rubino

    NSCL Cyclotron Lab

  • Andreas Stolz

    Michigan State University

  • Thomas Baumann

    FRIB/NSCL

  • Daniel Bazin

    Michigan State University

  • Jill Berryman

    National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory

  • Georg Bollen

    Michigan State University

  • Marco Cortesi

    NSCL,MSU, NSCL/FRIB, National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory

  • Alexander C Dombos

    University of Notre Dame

  • Alexandra Gade

    Michigan State University

  • Thomas N Ginter

    Michigan State University

  • Caley Harris

    MSU/NSCL

  • Marc Hausmann

    Michigan State University

  • Toshiyuki Kubo

    RIKEN Nishina Center

  • Elaine Kwan

    National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory

  • Sean N Liddick

    MSU/NSCL

  • Stephanie Lyons

    Michigan State University

  • David J Morrissey

    Michigan State University

  • Alicia Palmisano

    UTK

  • Jorge Pereira

    Michigan State University

  • Mauricio Portillo

    Michigan State University

  • Mallory K Smith

    NSCL

  • Andrea L Richard

    Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

  • Artemis Spyrou

    Michigan State University

  • Mathias Steiner

    Michigan State University