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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Laser photodetachment of radioactive $^{128}$I$^−$

Ulli KösterB. A. MarshC. SeiffertRalf Erik RosselRalf Erik RosselValentin FedosseevKlaus WendtR. HeinkeOliver ForstnerAnnie Ringvall-mobergAnnie Ringvall-mobergJakob WelanderDag HanstorpSebastian RotheSebastian RotheSebastian RotheDominik StuderT. KronYuan LiuK. ChrysalidisK. ChrysalidisJ SundbergJ SundbergThomas Day GoodacreThomas Day GoodacreKarl JohnstonSpyridon Fiotakis

subject

Nuclear and High Energy PhysicsIon beamFissionPhysics::Instrumentation and Detectors[PHYS.PHYS.PHYS-ACC-PH]Physics [physics]/Physics [physics]/Accelerator Physics [physics.acc-ph]02 engineering and technologyPhoton energy01 natural sciences7. Clean energySecondary electronsISOLDElaw.inventionIonlawElectron affinity0103 physical scienceselectron affinityPhysics::Atomic Physics010306 general physicsNuclear ExperimentPhysicsiodinephotodetachment021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyLaserAccelerators and Storage RingsBeamlinePhysics::Accelerator PhysicsAtomic physics0210 nano-technology

description

International audience; The first experimental investigation of the electron affinity (EA) of a radioactive isotope has been conducted at the CERN-ISOLDE radioactive ion beam facility. The EA of the radioactive iodine isotope (128)I (t (1/2) = 25 min) was determined to be 3.059 052(38) eV. The experiment was conducted using the newly developed Gothenburg ANion Detector for Affinity measurements by Laser PHotodetachment (GANDALPH) apparatus, connected to a CERN-ISOLDE experimental beamline. (128)I was produced in fission induced by 1.4 GeV protons striking a thorium/tantalum foil target and then extracted as singly charged negative ions at a beam energy of 20 keV. Laser photodetachment of the fast ion beam was performed in a collinear geometry inside the GANDALPH chamber. Neutral atoms produced in the photodetachment process were detected by allowing them to impinge on a glass surface, creating secondary electrons which were then detected using a channel electron multiplier. The photon energy of the laser was tuned across the threshold of the photodetachment process and the detachment threshold data were fitted to a Wigner law function in order to extract the EA. This first successful demonstration of photodetachment at an isotope separator on line facility opens up the opportunity for future studies of the fundamental properties of negatively charged radioactive isotopes such as the EA of astatine and polonium.

10.1088/1361-6471/aa80aahttps://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-01584646