Decay spectroscopy with Solenogam at the ANU Heavy ion Accelerator Facility

M. S.M. Gerathy, M. W. Reed, G. J. Lane, T. Kibédi, S. S. Hota, A. E. Stuchbery

    Research output: Contribution to journalConference articlepeer-review

    1 Citation (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Solenogam is a recoil spectrometer designed and constructed for use at the Australian National University (ANU) Heavy-Ion Accelerator Facility (HIAF). The design enables the study of nuclear excitations populated by the decay of long-lived states such as isomers and radioactive ground states. Solenogam is comprised of high-sensitivity γ-ray and electron detector arrays coupled to a new 8-T solenoid. While the installation of the 8-T solenoid proceeds, off-line measurements have been made to characterise Solenogam's performance. Gamma-electron coincidences in the electron capture decay of 182Re into 182W were used to investigate conversion coefficients and γ-e- angular correlations. The measured conversion coefficients show good agreement with theoretical calculations and have been used to extract E0/E2 mixing ratios for a number of J → J transitions. The angular correlations measured by the array are in qualitative agreement with theoretical calculations. However, the magnitudes of the correlations are attenuated by approximately 40% for reasons unknown at present. These results are the first full use of the Solenogam system for γ-e- coincidence measurements and have proven that the system is capable of highly-sensitive internal conversion analysis of complex decays.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number04007
    JournalEPJ Web of Conferences
    Volume123
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 5 Sept 2016
    Event2015 Heavy Ion Accelerator Symposium, HIAS 2015 - Canberra, Australia
    Duration: 14 Sept 201518 Sept 2015

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