The K hindrance to the gamma decay is studied in the warm rotating W-174 nucleus, focusing on the weakening of the selection rules of the K quantum number with increasing excitation energy. W-174 was populated by the fusion reaction of Ti-50 (at 217 MeV) on a Te-128 target, and its gamma decay was detected by the AGATA Demonstrator array coupled to a BaF2 multiplicity filter at Laboratori Nazionali di Legnaro of INFN. A fluctuation analysis of gamma coincidence matrices gives a similar number of low-K and high-K discrete excited bands. The results are compared to simulations of the gamma-decay flow based on a microscopic cranked shell model at finite temperature in which the K mixing is governed by the interplay of Coriolis force with the residual interaction. Agreement between simulations and experiment is obtained only by hindering the E1 decay between low-K and high-K bands by an amount compatible with that determined by spectroscopic studies of K isomers in the same mass region, with a similar trend with excitation energy. The work indicates that K mixing due to temperature effects may play a leading role for the entire body of discrete excited bands, which probes the onset region of K weakening.

The K hindrance to the gamma decay is studied in the warm rotating W-174 nucleus, focusing on the weakening of the selection rules of the K quantum number with increasing excitation energy. W-174 was populated by the fusion reaction of Ti-50 (at 217 MeV) on a Te-128 target, and its gamma decay was detected by the AGATA Demonstrator array coupled to a BaF2 multiplicity filter at Laboratori Nazionali di Legnaro of INFN. A fluctuation analysis of gamma coincidence matrices gives a similar number of low-K and high-K discrete excited bands. The results are compared to simulations of the gamma-decay flow based on a microscopic cranked shell model at finite temperature in which the K mixing is governed by the interplay of Coriolis force with the residual interaction. Agreement between simulations and experiment is obtained only by hindering the E1 decay between low-K and high-K bands by an amount compatible with that determined by spectroscopic studies of K isomers in the same mass region, with a similar trend with excitation energy. The work indicates that K mixing due to temperature effects may play a leading role for the entire body of discrete excited bands, which probes the onset region of K weakening.

Global properties of K hindrance probed by the γ decay of the warm rotating ^{174}W nucleus

GIAZ, AGNESE;
2013-01-01

Abstract

The K hindrance to the gamma decay is studied in the warm rotating W-174 nucleus, focusing on the weakening of the selection rules of the K quantum number with increasing excitation energy. W-174 was populated by the fusion reaction of Ti-50 (at 217 MeV) on a Te-128 target, and its gamma decay was detected by the AGATA Demonstrator array coupled to a BaF2 multiplicity filter at Laboratori Nazionali di Legnaro of INFN. A fluctuation analysis of gamma coincidence matrices gives a similar number of low-K and high-K discrete excited bands. The results are compared to simulations of the gamma-decay flow based on a microscopic cranked shell model at finite temperature in which the K mixing is governed by the interplay of Coriolis force with the residual interaction. Agreement between simulations and experiment is obtained only by hindering the E1 decay between low-K and high-K bands by an amount compatible with that determined by spectroscopic studies of K isomers in the same mass region, with a similar trend with excitation energy. The work indicates that K mixing due to temperature effects may play a leading role for the entire body of discrete excited bands, which probes the onset region of K weakening.
2013
quantum number; atomic-nuclei; states; isomers; fluctuation; alignment; spectra; region; rays
V., Vandone; S., Leoni; G., Benzoni; N., Blasi; A., Bracco; S., Brambilla; C., Boiano; S., Bottoni; F., Camera; A., Corsi; F. C. L., Crespi; Giaz, Agnese; B., Million; R., Nicolini; L., Pellegri; A., Pullia; O., Wieland; D., Bortolato; G., de Angelis; E., Calore; Gottardo, Andrea; G., Maron; D. R., Napoli; D., Rosso; E., Sahin; J. J., Valiente Dobon; D., Bazzacco; M., Bellato; E., Farnea; Lunardi, Santo; R., Menegazzo; Mengoni, Daniele; P., Molini; Michelagnoli, Caterina; Montanari, Daniele; Recchia, Francesco; C. A., Ur; A., Gadea; T., Hüyük; N., Cieplicka; A., Maj; M., Kmiecik; A., Atac; S., Akkoyun; A., Kaskas; P. A., Söderström; B., Birkenbach; B., Cederwall; P. J., Coleman Smith; D. M., Cullen; P., Désesquelles; J., Eberth; A., Görgen; J., Grebosz; H., Hess; D., Judson; A., Jungclaus; N., Karkour; P., Nolan; A., Obertelli; P., Reiter; M. D., Salsac; O., Stezowski; Theisen, C. h.; M., Matsuo; E., Vigezzi
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11383/2101617
 Attenzione

Attenzione! I dati visualizzati non sono stati sottoposti a validazione da parte dell'ateneo

Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 13
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 12
social impact