Report on RISING (and some other Current UK work) @ GSI · Report on RISING (and some other Current...
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Report on RISING (and some other Current UK work) @ GSI
Paddy ReganDept. of Physics
University of SurreyGuildford, GU2 7XH, UK

RISING = Rare ISotope INvestigations at GSI
2 major ‘campaigns’ so far
1) ‘Fast’ (in-beam) Campaign
1) ‘Stopped’ (isomer/β-decay) Campaign

Big collaborations, need a steering committee..significant UKInvolvement (Simpson and Nolan) at this level

Major campaign using ‘retired EUROBALL’ cluster detectors for fragmentation-based nuclear spectroscopy.
Stopped-Beam Campaign to study decays from isomers and following β-decay.
Three experiments for ‘isomer only’ part ran in Feb/Mar’061. N=Z~43 nuclei (107Ag beam, PHR)2. N=126, ‘south’ ( 208Pb beam, Zsolt Podolyák)3. 54Ni/54Fe isospin symmetry (58Ni beam, Dirk Rudolph)
To run in June-July 2006 and Dec. 2006, • 130Cd isomers (136Xe beam, Andrea Jungclaus)• 130Cd via fission (238U beam, Magda Gorska) • Fission fragments for A~110 (238U beam, Alison Bruce)
‘Active stopper’ expts for 2007 (N~126, 170Dy, Tz=-1.)

primary beamPb @ 1GeV/u
Production targetCentral focus, S2
Final focus, S4
ΔE(Z2)
cueB
QA
βγρ
=
βγ→FTO
catcher
degraderdegrader
dipole, Bρ
scintscint
MW=x,y
scint(veto)
Use FRS@GSI or LISE3@GANIL to ID nuclei. Transport some in isomeric states (TOF~ x00ns).Stop and correlate isomeric decays with nuclei id.
eg. R. Grzywacz et al. Phys. Rev. C55 (1997) p1126 � LISEC.Chandler et al. Phys. Rev. C61 (2000) 044309 � LISEM. Pfützner et al. Phys. Lett. B444 (1998) p32 � FRSZs. Podolyak et al. Phys. Lett. B491 (2000) p225 � FRSM. Pfützner et al. Phys Rev. C65 (2002) 064604 � FRSM. Caamano et al., Eur.Phys. J. A23 (2005) p201 � FRS
In-Flight Technique Using Projectile Fragmentation

208Pb beam at 1 GeV/u allows production of ( high-spin isomers,
M. Pfützner et al. Phys Rev. C65 (2002) 064604
High spins (>35/2) populated


CHICO + GS data136Xe + 198Pt

Stopped RISING mechanical support frame:design construction by Liverpool/CLRC-Daresbury

Stopped Rising Array @ GSI: 15 x 7 element CLUSTERsPhotopeak efficiency 15-17% at 1.3 MeV. XIA-DGF electronics



• Main Aim:Observe 10+ isomer in 54Ni
(Isomer already known in mirror, 54Fe)
Fragmentation of 600 MeV/A 58Ni beam
(D.Rudolph et al.)

D. Rudolph et al., 58Ni fragmentation
145
3385
3240
451
1226
1392
54Ni 10+ isomer (Mirror of 54Fe)
New Line New Line - 1327 keV

Dirk Rudolph et al.,Feb/Mar ’06 RISING
Proton Radioactivity of 54Ni!

Fragmentation of 1 GeV/A 208Pb beam
Zs. Podolyák et al.Main Aim:
Spectroscopy of N=126 nuclei: 206Hg, 204Pt, 202Os
Additional:
New isomeric decays in 203Pt, 189Ta, 204Au,…
Reaction studies:148Tb I=27+; 147Gd I=(49/2)190Pb (hot fragmentation)204Pt (cold fragmentation)

Gamma-gamma analysis on 200Pt isomer (21 ns!), M. Caamano et al. Nucl. Phys. A682 (2001) p223c; Acta Phys. Pol. B32 (2001) p763 stripping effect to extend lifetime

B. Fornal et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 87 (2001) 212501
• 206Hg (Z=80) is the most ‘neutron-rich’ N=126even-even isotope withstructural information todate….how robust is theN=126 shell ?
• Look at isomeric B(Mλ) for seniority isomers basedon proton (h11/2)-n states.

Iπ=10+ isomer, 2 proton cold knockoutfrom h11/2 orbitals. (< 100 ns half-life).
S. Steer, Zs. Podolyak et al., 208Pb fragmentation, RISING Mar’06

206Hg isomers, N=126, S. Steer, Zs. Podolyak et al., 208Pb RISING
5- isomer
10+ isomer
Relative isomeric ratios give insight into cold proton ‘knockout’ theory see J. Tostevin AIP Conf. Proc. 819 (2006) p523.

Podolyàk, Steer et al., 208Pb frag. RISING @ GSI Mar’06
N=126, 4 proton holes
March’06RISINGdata

Fragmentation studies: cold fragmentation (206Hg, 204Pt)hot fragmentation (190Pb)high-spin states 27ħ in 148Tb, (49/2) in 147Gd
148Tb
Z1
Z2
A/Q
Pos. at S4
148Tb
Tb
E. Werner-Malento, Zs. Podolyak et al.

Popu
latio
n of
stat
es (e
xper
imen
t/the
ory)
Angular momentum
Zs. Podolyák et al., Phys. Lett. B632 (2006) 203.
increased high angular momentum population
due to collective I
March 2006148Tb I=27 147Gd I=49/2

62Ga : S.M. Vincent al al., Phys. Lett. 437B (1998) 264D. Rudolph et al., Phys. Rev. C69 (2004) 034309
66As: R. Grzywacz et al., Nucl. Phys. A682 (2001) 41cR. Grzywacz et al., Phys. Lett. 429B (1998) 247
70Br: M. Karny et al., Phys. Rev. C70 (2004) 014310D.G. Jenkins et al., Phys. Rev. C65 (2002) 0644307 G. DeAngelis et al., Eur. Phys. J. A12 (2001) 51
74Rb: C.D. O’Leary et al., Phys. Rev. C67 (2003) 021301D. Rudolph et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 76 (1996) 376
78Y ? 82Nb ? p3n reactions, β-delayed tagging ?86Tc: C. Chandler et al., Phys. Rev. C61 (2000) 044309
Iπ=0+ T=1 ground states from β-decay for 74Rb, 78Y, 82Nb, 86Tc and 90RhJ. Garces Narro et al., Phys. Rev. C63 (2001) 044307T. Faestermann et al., Eur. Phys. J. A15 (2002) 185
Summary of odd-odd N=Z Spectroscopy (to Mar. 06)


A.B. Garnsworthy et al.,

A.B. Garnsworthy et al.,

The Proposed Structure of 86Tc
850 keVE3 = 8.35x10-6 s
270 keVM2 = 1.1x10-6 s
581 keVM1 = 3.1x10-14 s
A.B. Garnsworthy et al., preliminary
Δl, Δj=3 ?g9/2 x p3/2

New Data point
-2000
-1000
0
1000
2000
3000
4000
0 20 40 60 80 100
A
E(T=
1-T=
0) (k
eV)
T=0 Dominant
T=1 More Competitive
40Ca
16O
56Ni
86Tc
The Trend Continues?!?

E(2+) for odd-odd N=Z T=1 states follows e-e trend with β2
86Tc74Rb
70Br66As
62Ga

208Pb region SUPER-FRS Yields
many μs isomersexpected
212Po, 18+, 65s
215Ra, 43/2-, 800ns
217Ac, 29/2+, 1μs
N=126, holes in 208Pb

UNILAC SIS
FRS
ESR
SIS 100/200
HESR
SuperFRS
NESR
CR
Next-generation RNB facilities - Fragmentation
J. Benlliure
“Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research (FAIR)” :

The Super-FRS and its Branches
NuSTAR- [Nuclear Structure Astrophysics and Reactions] Collaboration
R3B
EXLELISE
ILIMA

1) Daresbury Laboratory UK2) University of Liverpool UK3) University of Surrey UK4) UAM Madrid Spain5) Universidad de Salamanca Spain6) IFIC Valencia Spain 7) GSI Darmstadt Germany8) Universit ät zu Köln Germany9) IFIN-HH Bucharest Romania
10) University of Camerino Italy11) University of Jyvaskyla Finland12) University of Sofia Bulgaria13) Royal Inst. of Tech., Stockholm Sweden14) IReS Strasbourg France
Members of the DESPEC Ge array working group
• 11 February, 2005GSI, Germany
• 7 April, 2005Surrey, UK
• 4 November, 2005Madrid, Spain
• 22 February, 2006GSI, Germany
Meetings
http://www.ft.uam.es/Nuclear/Nuc_Exp_Inv_DESPEC_home.htm
DESPEC ‘active stopper’ funded in last round (Liv. + Edin. + DL. + RAL)

Array of stacks of segmented planar Ge detectors
standard geometrycube geometry
24 stacks of 3 planar Ge

Alternative: array of 6/8 Clover detectors
DESPEC gamma-ray arraymajor UK Grant to be:Surrey, Liverpool, CLRC,Daresbury, York, Brighton, Manchester, Paisley….

Schottky Mass Spectrometry
950 MeV/u 209Bi + Be Projectile FragmentsNew and Reference Masses in the same Spectrum
High Resolution and Sensitivity
accuracy: 30 keV

ILIMA will greatly extend our knowledge of masses
It will reach a large number of nuclei of importance in explosive stellarProcesses
ILIMA ‘boss man’ = Phil Walker.
It will give us a much better idea of where the drip-lines lie.

R3B-Reactions with Relativistic Radioactive Beams
Aim:- Kinematically complete measurements of reactions with high energy RNBs
- Broad programme – Heavy ion induced EM excitation- Knockout and breakup reactions- Light ion elastic, inelastic and quasi-free
scattering, Charge exchange


R3B/EXL UK Contribution : Target Recoil Detectors
EXL Si ArrayConstruction & Assembly@ LSDC
ASICFEEDAQ
R3B Si Array
Construction & Assembly
R3B/EXL Schedule for the next 7 years:2006-07 R&D, Tests, Prototypes2008-11 Production of Detection Systems 2010-11 Phase I commissioning (+first experiment)
2012 Phase II commissioning
TPC/Active Target

S287 Experiment - May 2005Physics Motivations
• Collective properties– Dipole strength distributions (electromagnetic
excitation)
• Single-particle properties– One-neutron Coulomb breakup– One-neutron knockout reactions– Quasifree hadronic scattering reactions
Reactions studies with relativistic RIBsaround N=40, along the Ni isotopic chain

The Dipole Response of Neutron-Rich Nuclei
Neutron-Proton asymmetric nuclei: low-lying dipole strength
Prediction: RMF (N. Paar et al.)
132Sn
100% of the E1 strength absorbed into theGiant Dipole Resonance(GDR)
Stable nuclei:120Sn
Vretenar et al. (RMF calculations)

Experimental Set-up: ALADIN – LAND
68, 70
, 72 Ni
550 A.MeV
CH2 target : Quasifree scattering reactionsC target : Knockout reactionsPb target : Electromagnetic Excitation
+ Plastic & CsI 2p array

A/Z vs Z for secondary beamoptimized for 72Ni
A/Z vs Z for secondary beamoptimized for 69Ni
A/Z vs Z for secondary beamoptimized for 56Ni (top), 57Ni (bottom)
ZnCu
NiCo
FeMn
Cr
Mixed secondary beam in Cave C
72Ni @ 500 AMeV
(~20 ions/sec)S. Paschalis, PhD student (Liverpool)

Quasifree Scattering PROGRAM at GSI/FAIR S296 Expt:( spokesperson: R. Lemmon et al. )-To be run in 2007
Test with a stable beam (12C) at the existing ALADIN/LAND set-up -> Test the QFS technique in inverse kinematics, commission and optimise the performance of the full detector system.
FUTURE PROGRAM at R3B:
-First stage: Use of unpolarised H target with exotic beams: (p,2p) and (p,pn) -> to map the evolution with the changing isospin.
-Second stage: Polarised quasifree hadronic scattering: analysing powers -> access to j-values and in-medium effects.

TARGET-RECOIL DETECTOR: Silicon-array
Characteristics:
Double-sided siliconmicrostrips sensors
-72x 41.3 mm2
-300 μm thickness
-640x384 strips
-associated electronics (ASIC)
41.3 mm
72 mm
8 detectors available and tested in November 2005 : (2 detectors purchased by UK institutions: Birmingham, Daresbury, Liverpool, Surrey).12C and 8B at Einc =350 A.MeV -> ΔE (FWHM) ~ 40-50 KeV

SIMULATIONS for QFS Experiments at GSI/FAIR12C(p,p’)12C at 400 A.MeV (GEANT4)
Test Experiment (GEOMETRY-1)
ΔE
(MeV
)
Ep’ (MeV)
<ΔE’>(FWHM) = 3.2 MeV GEANT4
R3B Target-Recoil Detector
Si Tracker
CsI Calorimeter
<ΔE’>(FWHM) = 1.0 MeV
B. Fernandez Dominguez (Liverpool)

EXL – Exotic Nuclei studied in light-ion induced reactions at the NESR
Schematic view of a cross-section of the EXL detector system, with the details shown on the right.

EXL- What information can we expect?
Elastic scattering -nuclear matter radii/distributions-haloes,skins,central densities
Inelastic scattering -surface collective states/electric giant resonances/analysing powers-bulk props.in asymmetric matter/compressibilty/soft modes
Charge exchange -GT/spin-dipole resonances/spin-isospin excns.-neutron skin/spin excns./stellar weak interaction rates
Transfer reactions -spectroscopic factors/s.p. particle and hole states/pair transfer-s.p.structure/spin-orbit interaction/pairing interaction
Quasi-free scattering -s.p.spectral function/cluster knockout-s.p.structure/nucleon-nucleon correlations/in-medium interactions
●First real programme of reaction studies with exotic nuclei in a ring.●Detector system will handle a widerange of different types of reaction.●Exclusive measurements-hence ofinterest with stable beams too.

Contributions to Future facilities : PANDA@FAIRDesign of magnetic solenoid (Glasgow)
RICH (Glasgow)Endcap DIRC (Edinburgh)
Grid computing technology (Glasgow)
Nucleon Polarimetry (Edinburgh)
p
Interaction point
SolenoidDipole
EM and hadroncalorimeters
RICH
Drift or wirechambers
Muon counters
Simulations (Glasgow/Edinburgh)