Beta-Decay of 29F: The Southern Shore of The Island of Inversion
POSTER
Abstract
In nuclear physics, the island of inversion refers to exotic neutron-rich nuclei that do not follow a standard configuration in the nuclear shell model. To explore this region, the 29F experiment ran in October 2020 at NSCL in Michigan State University. This experiment studies an isotope of fluorine, 29F, in a fragmentation nuclear reaction by implanting it in a crystal detector to measure its decay. By analyzing the decay of this neutron-rich isotope, it will lead to a better understanding of its decay strength, ground state wave function, and the internal structure of 29F and other exotic nuclei near the island of inversion. The VANDLE array alongside a YSO scintillator and three Germanium clover detectors analyze the ions for each individual event to map the decay. The clovers are fitted with thin beta-veto (vetos) plastics in order to maximize efficiency; we determined 2 mm offered the best compromise between high beta response and small gamma background. In this presentation we will show the simulations and evaluation data used to define the beta gamma response.
Presenters
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Jesse N Farr
University of Tennessee, University of Tennessee Knoxville
Authors
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Jesse N Farr
University of Tennessee, University of Tennessee Knoxville
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James Christie
University of Tennessee, University of Tennessee Knoxville
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Isidora Fletcher
University of Tennessee, University of Tennessee Knoxville
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Donnie Hoskins
University of Tennessee Knoxville
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Philipp Wagenknecht
University of Tennessee, University of Tennessee Knoxville, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
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Zhengyu Xu
University of Tennessee, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
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Miguel Madurga
University of Tennessee, University of Tennessee, Knoxville