6533b7d7fe1ef96bd1269276
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Stability of the heaviest elements : K isomer in 250No
J. KallunkathariyilB. SulignanoP. T. GreenleesJ. KhuyagbaatarCh. TheisenK. AuranenH. BadranF. BissoP. BrionnetR. BriseletA. DrouartZ. FavierT. GoigouxT. GrahnK. HauschildA. HerzanF. P. HeßbergerU. JakobssonR. JulinS. JuutinenJ. KonkiM. LeinoA. LightfootJ. PakarinenP. PapadakisJ. PartanenP. PeuraP. RahkilaK. RezynkinaP. RuotsalainenM. SandzeliusJ. SarenC. ScholeyM. SicilianoJ. SorriS. StolzeA. I. SvirikhinJ. UusitaloM. VandebrouckA. WardC. WraithM. Zielińskasubject
isomer decaysydinfysiikkanuclear structure and decaysdescription
Decay spectroscopy of 250No has been performed using digital electronics and pulse-shape analysis of the fast nuclear decays for the first time. Previous studies of 250No reported two distinct fission decay lifetimes, related to the direct fission of the ground state and to the decay of an isomeric state but without the possibility to determine if the isomeric state decayed directly via fission or via internal electromagnetic transitions to the ground state. The data obtained in the current experiment allowed the puzzle to finally be resolved, attributing the shorter half-life of t1/2 = 3.8 ± 0.3 μs to the ground state and the longer half-life t1/2 = 34.9+3.9 −3.2 μs to the decay of an isomeric state. 250No becomes, thus, one of a very few examples of very heavy nuclei with an isomeric state living considerably longer than its ground state. This phenomenon has important consequences for the nuclear-structure models aiming to determine the borders of the island of stability of superheavy elements. peerReviewed
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2020-01-01 |