Isomer beam elastic scattering: 26mAl(p, p) for astrophysics

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Abstract

The advent of radioactive ground-state beams some three decades ago ultimately sparked a revolution in our understanding of nuclear physics. However, studies with radioactive isomer beams are sparse and have often required sophisticated apparatuses coupled with the technologies of ground-state beams due to typical mass differences on the order of hundreds of keV and vastly different lifetimes for isomers. We present an application of a isomeric beam of 26mAl to one of the most famous observables in nuclear astrophysics: galactic 26Al. The characteristic decay of 26Al in the Galaxy was the first such specific radioactivity to be observed originating from outside the Earth some four decades ago. We present a newly-developed, novel technique to probe the structure of low-spin states in 27Si. Using the Center for Nuclear Study low-energy radioisotope beam separator (CRIB), we report on the measurement of 26mAl proton resonant elastic scattering conducted with a thick target in inverse kinematics. The preliminary results of this on-going study are presented.

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Kahl, D., Shimizu, H., Yamaguchi, H., Abe, K., Beliuskina, O., Cha, S. M., … Yang, L. (2017). Isomer beam elastic scattering: 26mAl(p, p) for astrophysics. In EPJ Web of Conferences (Vol. 165). EDP Sciences. https://doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/201716501030

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