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Dipole response in Te 128,130 below the neutron threshold

Publication ,  Journal Article
Isaak, J; Savran, D; Löher, B; Beck, T; Friman-Gayer, U; Krishichayan, ; Pietralla, N; Ponomarev, VY; Scheck, M; Tornow, W; Werner, V ...
Published in: Physical Review C
April 1, 2021

Background: Numerous studies of the ground-state decay of the pygmy dipole resonance (PDR) have been carried out in the past. However, data on the decay of the PDR to low-lying excited states is still very scarce due to limitations of the sensitivity to weak branching transitions of experimental setups. Purpose: We present a detailed examination of the low-energy dipole response of Te128 and Te130 below their neutron separation thresholds of 8.8 and 8.5 MeV, respectively. Methods: Photonuclear reactions with the subsequent γ-ray spectroscopy of the decay channel with continuous-energy bremsstrahlung at varying endpoint energies and linearly polarized quasimonochromatic γ-ray beams with energies ranging from 2.7 to 8.9 MeV in steps of roughly 250 keV were used for probing the decay behavior of the low-energy dipole response in Te128 and Te130. In addition, (γ - ,γ′γ′′) reactions were used to study the population of low-lying states of Te128. Results: Spin-parity quantum numbers and reduced transition probabilities are determined for individual photo-excited states. The analysis of average decay properties for nuclear levels in narrow excitation-energy bins enable the extraction of photoabsorption cross sections, average branching ratios to the 21+ state, and the distinction between E1 and M1 transitions to the ground state and to the 21+ state accounting for resolved and unresolved transitions. Conclusions: Above 5 MeV, the experimental data are in reasonable agreement to calculations within the quasiparticle phonon model. The major fraction of the ground-state decay channel is due to E1 transitions, while less than 5-10% stem from M1 transitions. Furthermore, first direct experimental evidence is provided that the population of the 21+ state of Te128 via primary γ-ray transitions from excited states in the PDR region from 5 to 9 MeV is dominated by E1 transitions of 1- states.

Duke Scholars

Published In

Physical Review C

DOI

EISSN

2469-9993

ISSN

2469-9985

Publication Date

April 1, 2021

Volume

103

Issue

4

Related Subject Headings

  • 5106 Nuclear and plasma physics
 

Citation

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MLA
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Isaak, J., Savran, D., Löher, B., Beck, T., Friman-Gayer, U., Krishichayan, ., … Zweidinger, M. (2021). Dipole response in Te 128,130 below the neutron threshold. Physical Review C, 103(4). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevC.103.044317
Isaak, J., D. Savran, B. Löher, T. Beck, U. Friman-Gayer, U. Krishichayan, N. Pietralla, et al. “Dipole response in Te 128,130 below the neutron threshold.” Physical Review C 103, no. 4 (April 1, 2021). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevC.103.044317.
Isaak J, Savran D, Löher B, Beck T, Friman-Gayer U, Krishichayan, et al. Dipole response in Te 128,130 below the neutron threshold. Physical Review C. 2021 Apr 1;103(4).
Isaak, J., et al. “Dipole response in Te 128,130 below the neutron threshold.” Physical Review C, vol. 103, no. 4, Apr. 2021. Scopus, doi:10.1103/PhysRevC.103.044317.
Isaak J, Savran D, Löher B, Beck T, Friman-Gayer U, Krishichayan, Pietralla N, Ponomarev VY, Scheck M, Tornow W, Werner V, Zilges A, Zweidinger M. Dipole response in Te 128,130 below the neutron threshold. Physical Review C. 2021 Apr 1;103(4).

Published In

Physical Review C

DOI

EISSN

2469-9993

ISSN

2469-9985

Publication Date

April 1, 2021

Volume

103

Issue

4

Related Subject Headings

  • 5106 Nuclear and plasma physics