Quenching of the octupole rotational band in <sup>71</sup>Ge
ORAL
Abstract
The main goal of this study was to enhance the knowledge of the properties of the known octupole rotational band in 71Ge, including transition rates, and to investigate whether the band persists to higher spin. An experiment at Florida State University using the 62Ni(14C, αn) reaction at 50 MeV was used to produce 71Ge at high spin. An array of 10 Compton-suppressed Ge detectors, consisting of 3 Clover detectors and 7 single-crystal detectors, was used to measure the γ decays in coincidence. An analysis of the resulting coincidence spectra resulted in the placement of 13 additional transitions in the 71Ge level scheme, one of which (1092 keV) extends the octupole band to a (35/2–)$ state at 8206 keV. However, calculations of the kinematic moment of inertia show that the 1092-keV transition disrupts the rigid rotational pattern and is likely associated with a band crossing, potentially quenching the octupole deformation. Transition strengths inferred from lifetime measurements in the octupole band are not well reproduced by either shell-model calculations using the JUN45 interaction or a semi-microscopic cluster model, while those for the νg9/2 band are in good agreement with the corresponding shell-model predictions. Comparisons between the octupole band in 71Ge and negative-parity bands based on 3– octupole states in some neighboring even-even nuclei show both similarities and differences. Systematic trends within the νg9/2 bands among odd-A Ge isotopes point to increased collectivity near N = 40.
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Publication: R.A. Haring-Kaye et al., Phys. Rev. C 111, 054312 (2025)
Presenters
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Robert A Haring-Kaye
Westmont College
Authors
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Robert A Haring-Kaye
Westmont College
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Reese Toepfer
Westmont College
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Kirsten Potts
Westmont College
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Natalie Fogg
Westmont College
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Joachim Dōring
Bundesamt fur Strahlenschutz
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Samuel L Tabor
Florida State University
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Vandana Tripathi
Florida State University
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Alexander Volya
Department of Physics, Florida State University, Florida State University
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Brittany Abromeit
Pacific Northwest National Laboratory
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Rebeka Lubna
Facility for Rare Isotope Beams
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Pei-Luan Tai
Rutgers University, New Brunswick
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Justin M VonMoss
Florida State University
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Khanh Q Le
Temple University