Implementation of Skewed Gaussian Fitting for Phase-Imaging Ion-Cyclotron-Resonance Calculations
POSTER
Abstract
Atomic masses are one of the fundamental properties of atomic nuclei, and their measurement provides access to information on nuclear binding energies, nuclear states, and nuclear reaction Q-values. This has applications as varied as neutrino physics, inputs to nuclear astrophysics models, and the search for beyond-the-Standard Model physics, all of which need precise and accurate mass measurements. Hence, the Canadian Penning Trap (CPT) at Argonne National Laboratory has measured the masses of over 300 isotopes produced by the CAlifornium Rare Isotope Breeder Upgrade (CARIBU) 252Cf spontaneous fission source using the Phase-Imaging Ion-Cyclotron- Resonance (PI-ICR) technique. However, PI-ICR data can sometimes have a tail behind the cluster of ions that can arise from many different sources such as ion-ion interactions, incomplete excitations, poorly-tuned beams, or temporal drifts in the system during the measurements. I will present results of the analysis of measurements of masses of Sn, Sb, Te, and I isotopes and isomers around A≈130, alongside my implementation of a skewed Gaussian fitting model in an attempt to improve the precision of the analysis by accounting for the tail.
Publication: Precise Mass Measurements of A=133 Isobars with the Canadian Penning Trap: Resolving the Qβ value anomaly at 133Te (in progress)<br>Isomers at A~130 (in progress)
Presenters
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Alec D Cannon
University of Notre Dame
Authors
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Alec D Cannon
University of Notre Dame
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Adrian A Valverde
Argonne National Laboratory
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Jason A Clark
Argonne National Laboratory
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William S Porter
University of Notre Dame
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Maxime Brodeur
University of Notre Dame
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Biying Liu
University of Notre Dame
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Dwaipayan Ray
Argonne National Laboratory
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Guy Savard
Argonne National Laboratory