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Coulomb excitation of $^{110}$Sn using REX-ISOLDE

In this paper, we report the preliminary result from the first Coulomb excitation experiment at REX-ISOLDE (Habs et al 1998 Nucl. Instrum. Methods B 139 128) using neutron-deficient Sn-beams. The motivation of the experiment is to deduce the reduced transition probability, B(E2 ; 2$^+\rightarrow$ 0$...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ekström, A, Cederkäll, J, Hurst, A, Fahlander, C, Banu, A, Butler, P, Eberth, J, Górska, M, Habs, D, Huyse, M, Kester, O, Niedermayer, O, Nilsson, T, Pantea, M, Scheit, H, Schwalm, D, Sletten, G, Ushasi, D P, Van Duppen, P, Warr, N, Weisshaar, D
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0031-8949/2006/T125/045
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1014268
Descripción
Sumario:In this paper, we report the preliminary result from the first Coulomb excitation experiment at REX-ISOLDE (Habs et al 1998 Nucl. Instrum. Methods B 139 128) using neutron-deficient Sn-beams. The motivation of the experiment is to deduce the reduced transition probability, B(E2 ; 2$^+\rightarrow$ 0$^+$) , for the sequence of neutron deficient, unstable, even-even Sn-isotopes from using a radioactive beam opens up a new path to study the lifetime of the first excited 2$^+$ state in these isotopes. The de-excitation path following fusion-evaporation reactions will for the even-even Sn isotopes pass via an isomeric 6$^+$ state, located at higher energy, which thus hampers measurements of the lifetime of the first excited state using, e.g., recoil-distance methods. For this reason the reduced transition probability of the first excited 2$^+$ state has remained unknown in this chain of isotopes although the B(E2) value of the stable isotope $^{112}$Sn was measured approximately 30 years ago (see, e.g., Stelson et al 1970 Phys. Rev. C 2 2015). Our experiment is thus the first to accomplish a measurement of this quantity in $^{111}$Sn. It is believed that the determination of the B(E2) value in $^{110}$Sn will indicate the turnover point from a trend of increasing B(E2) values for the heavier isotopes to a trend characterized by less collectivity. Our first preliminary result indicates that this assumption may well be correct.