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Experimental studies toward better understanding of beta-delayed neutron emission

ORAL

Abstract

Beta-delayed neutron emission process is a dominant decay mode for the majority of neutron-rich nuclei. The neutron-emission part of the process is typically modeled using Hauser-Feshbach formalism under the assumption of the compound nucleus stage. This however requires the presence of a mechanism to transition from configurations populated during beta-decay which, in case prevalent allowed Gamow-Teller type transformation, results in a restricted set of configurations. Detailed measurements of neutron emission probabilities to excited nuclear states can be used as a probe to investigate the validity of the compound-nucleus stage. Experiments were performed on a range of nuclei from nitrogen to iodine to probe the nature of neutron emission after beta decay revealing in some cases non-statistical behavior. A simple model was constructed to link this behavior to the details nuclear structure of involved nuclei,

Presenters

  • Robert Grzywacz

    University of Tennessee, University of Tennessee, Knoxville

Authors

  • Robert Grzywacz

    University of Tennessee, University of Tennessee, Knoxville

  • Zhengyu Xu

    University of Tennessee Knoxville

  • Miguel Madurga

    University of Tennessee