380 likes | 518 Views
Experimental techniques to deduce J p. Joint ICTP-IAEA Workshop on Nuclear Structure and Decay Data Theory and Evaluation 28 April - 9 May 2008 Tibor Kibédi. Outline:. Lecture I: Experimental techniques to deduce J p from Internal Conversion Coefficients
E N D
Experimental techniques to deduce Jp Joint ICTP-IAEA Workshop on Nuclear Structure and Decay Data Theory and Evaluation 28 April - 9 May 2008 Tibor Kibédi
Outline: • Lecture I:Experimental techniques to deduce Jp from • Internal Conversion Coefficients • Angular distributions and correlations • Directional Correlations from Oriented nuclei (DCO) Lecture II: New developments in characterizing nuclei far from stability Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
Ei Ji Eg, L, Dp p Ef Jf Electromagnetic Decay and Nuclear Structure • Energetics of g-decay: • Ei = Ef + Eg + Tr • 0 = pr + pg, • where Tr = (pr)2/2M; usually Tr/Eg~10-5 p • Angular momentum and parity selection rules; multipolarities • |Ji - Jf| ≤ L ≤ Ji + Jf; L ≠ 0 Ji = Jf • Dp = no; E2, E4, E6 M1, M3, M5 E0 • Dp = yes; E1, E3, E5 M2, M4, M6 Multipolarity known DJmay not be unique uniqueDp • Mixed multipolarity • d(p`L`) = Ig(p`L`) / Ig(pL) Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
Electromagnetic decay modes • Angular distribution with spins oriented • Angular correlations • Polarization effects g-ray Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
Electromagnetic decay modes • Electron conversion coefficients • E0 transitions: DL=0 • Angular distribution with spins oriented • Angular correlations • Polarization effects g-ray electron conversion L M K Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
Electromagnetic decay modes • Electron conversion coefficients • E0 transitions: DL=0 • Angular distribution with spins oriented • Angular correlations • Polarization effects • Pair conversion coefficients • E0 transitions: DL=0 g-ray electron conversion e- - e+ pair L M K Higher order effects: for example2 photon emission is very weak Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
Angular distributions of Gamma-rays 2 → 2 transition Mixed, L=1, L`=2 Mixing ratio d(pL/p`L`) = Ig(p`L`) / Ig(pL) Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
Angular distributions of Gamma-rays 2 → 1 transition Mixed, L=1, L`=2 Mixing ratio d(pL/p`L`) = Ig(p`L`) / Ig(pL) Mixing ratio d(p`L`) = Ig(p`L`) / Ig(pL) Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
Angular distributions of Gamma-rays Attenuation due to relaxation of nuclear orientation For Fk(LL`JfJi) see E. Der Mateosian and A.W. Sunyar, ADNDT 13 (1974) 391 • Nuclear orientation can be achieved • by interaction of external fields (E,B) with the static moments of the nuclei at low temperatures • by nuclear reaction Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
Tungsten Polyethylene Copper HPGe Detector Lead Ring Annular BGO Angular distributions of Gamma-rays(n,n) reaction on 92Zr ‘ n` Sample (41 gr) Pulsed Proton beam θ = 40° - 150 ° Gas Cell 3H(p,n) @ Ep = 4.9 MeV En = 3.9 MeV Figure courtesy of S.W. Yates C. Fransen, et al., PRC C71, 054304 (2005) at Univ. of Kentucky Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
Angular distributions of Gamma-rays(n,n) reaction on 92Zr ‘ 92Zr(n,n`) reaction 12 angles and 12 hours / angle g-spectrometer at 1.4 m Eg = 2123.0 keV Fit to data C. Fransen, et al., PRC C 71, 054304 (2005), at Univ. of Kentucky Deduced A2=A22/A0 A4 = A44/A0 Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
Mixing ratio, d deduced from 2 of as a function of d But no information on Electric or Magnetic character: E1+M2 or M1+E2 Angular distributions – mixing ratio ‘ Beam defines a symmetry axis where Bk(J) is the statistical tensor Eg = 2123.0 keV Approximation with Gaussian distribution • = 0.69(16) (D+Q) Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
g2(k2) g1(k1) Directional Correlations from Oriented nuclei (DCO) ‘ zk J1 2 1 L1 L1d1 ` J2 L2 L2d2 ` yk 1 J3 2 xk For a J1→ J2→ J3 cascade(see A.E. Stuchbery, Nucl. Phys. A723 (2003) 69) Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
10+ g1 8+ g2 (□) 6+ g2 (●) 4+ g2 (○) 2+ 0+ Directional Correlations from Oriented nuclei (DCO) example ‘ 184Pt from natGd + 29Si @ 145 MeV CAESAR array (ANU) M.P. Robinson et al., Phys. Lett B530 (2002) 74 Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
g2(k2) g1(k1) Directional Correlations from Oriented nuclei DCO ratio zk J1 2 1 L1 L1d1 ` J2 L2 L2d2 ` yk 1 J3 2 xk By ignoring dependence we get For stretched transitions Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
bound state electron free particle electron Conversion electrons (CE) Radial distribution of EWF g-ray Electron conversion K L M r • Energetics of CE-decay (i=K, L, M,….) • Ei = Ef + Ece,i + EBE,i + Tr • g- and CE-decays are independent; transition probability • lT = lg + lCE = lg + lK + lL + lM…… • Conversion coefficient • ai = lCE,i / lg Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
Fermi’s golden rule bound state electron free particle electron The physics of conversion coefficients Density of the final electron state (continuum) Electron Nuclear Multipolar source Same for and CE Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
Sensitivity to transition multipolarity • ai depends on • Transition energy (Eg) • Atomic number (Z) • Multipol order (L; the angular momentum carried away) • Electric (El) or magnetic (Ml) character • The shell or subshell the electron is ejected • Atomic screening • Nuclear structure effects (penetration) • NOTE (3) and (4) often referred as multipolarity (pL) aKNOT SELECTIVE Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
Mixed multipolarity and E0 transitions In some cases the mixing ratio can be deduced E0 transitions – pure penetration effect; no g-rays (Ig=0) • Pure E0 transition: 0+ → 0+ or 0- → 0- • J → J (J≠0) transitions can be mixed E0+E2+M1 Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
134.363(18) keV M1+E2 transition in 172Yb 2(MR) hyper surface CE data 1968Ka01 K 0.63(16) 1968Ka01 L1/L2 0.62(19) 1968Ka01 L2/L3 1.3(3) MR=1.3(3) (ENSDF) MR=1.52(24) (BrIccMixing from Chi-squared fit) MR=1.5(+12-4) (BrIccMixing from Χ2(MR) hyper surface) Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
M1-shell Z=30 (Zn) E2 L1-shell K-shell Electron-positron pair production • Conversion coefficient • ai = lCE,i / lg • Total conversion coefficient • aT = aK + aL + aM + ….+ap Fewer electrons than g-rays More on conversion coefficients Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
Measuring conversion coefficients - methods • NPG: normalization of relative CE (ICE,i) and g (Ig) intensities via intensities of one (or more) transition with known a • CEL: Coulomb excitation and lifetime measurement • XPG: intensity ratio of K X-rays to g-rays with K-fluorescent yield, K And many more, see Hamilton`s book Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
Internal Conversion Process – the Pioneers E. Seltzer & R. Hager E.F. Zganjar T.R. Gerholm M.E. Rose J.H. Hamilton M. Sakai May 1965, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
Conversion electron spectroscopy with PACES Based on new data, favoured interpretation is that isomer is not a high-K, but Kp=0+ Electrons are vital! K/L(E3) ~ 0.3 Built by E. Zganjar, LSU Figure courtesy of P.M. Walker (Surrey) and P. Garrett (Guelph) channel number (0.6 keV/ch) Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
Magnetic spectrometers • Superconducting solenoid • Broad-range mode – 100 keV up to a few MeV • Lens mode – finite transmitted momentum bandwidth (Dp/p~15-25%) – high peak-to-background ratio • Mini-orange (looks like a peeled orange) • transmission > 20% • small size and portability, but poorer quality ATOMKI, Debrecen Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
Super-e Lens (ANU) Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
Super-e Lens (ANU) 194Pt(12C,4n)202Po @ 76 MeV Pulsed beams (~1 ns) with 1.7 ms separation Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
The SACRED Electron Spectrometer (Liverpool-JYFL) H. Kankaanpää et al., NIM A534 (2004) 503 see also P.A. Butler et al., NIM A381 (1996) 433 Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
208Pb(48Ca,2n)254No S. Eeckhaudt, et al., Eur. Phys. J. A 25, 605 (2005) The SACRED arrayexample P.A. Butler, et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 89, 202501 (2002) Sacred + RITU recoil tagged CE Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
Super-e & Honey (ANU) Electrons from atomic collisions are the major difficulty in low energy CE spectroscopy using ion induced reactions HPGe Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
Super-e Honey (ANU)eeg coincidences Gate on ALL CE Eg=63.1 keV transition not visible in the gamma spectrum aT(M1) = 7.3! Gate on ALL gammas 63.1 g: aT(M1)= 7.3 K-shell conversion not allowed BEK=90.5 keV 63.1 LM 208Pb(p,n)208Bi @ 9 MeV K.H. Maier et al, Phys. Rev. C 76, 064304 (2007) Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
Gate on 63 LM CE Super-e Honey (ANU)eeg coincidences Gate on 63 LM CE 538.2 Gate on 538.2 keV gammas 63.1 g: aT(M1)= 7.3 Gate on 538.2 keV gammas 63.1 g: aT(M1)= 7.3 63.1 LM 63.1 LM Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
ICC from total intensity balances –example 1 t Out-of-beam (or decay) coincidence data 228/463 1085/463 IN OUT Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
ICC from total intensity balances – when to use • Be careful near energies close to shell binding • Accuracy of gamma-ray measurements controls the range of its use M3 M2 E3 E2 M1 E1 dIg/Ig ~ 10% M N L K Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
ICC from total intensity balances –example 2 In-beam: only when gating from “above” 577/611 Side feeding 207/311 Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
ICC from X- and g-ray intensities • Vacancies in the atomic shell give rise to rearrangements in the shells which are accompanied by the emission of • X-rays • Auger electrons K x-rays: Ka (K-L shells) Kb (K-M, K-MN, etc. shells) B Schönfeld and h. Jansen, Nucl. Instr. and Merh. in Phys. Res. A 369 (1993) 527. Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
661.657g Ba-KX ICC from X- and g-ray intensities • Singles gamma measurement • No other photon and/or contaminates • Well calibrated spectrometer • Correct treatment of the photon attenuation, scattering, etc. • Knowledge of the fluorescence yield N. Nica, et al. Phys. Rev. C75 (2007) 024308 Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008
Acknowledgements G.D. Dracoulis , G.J. Lane, P. Nieminen, H. Maier (ANU) F.G. Kondev (ANL) P.E. Garrett (University of Guelph and TRIUMF) S.W. Yates (Univ. of Kentucky) Tibor Kibèdi, Dep. of Nuclear Physics, Australian National University ICTP-IAEA Workshop7-May-2008