Search results for "nuclear-state lifetimes"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

A time-of-flight correction procedure for fast-timing data of recoils with varying implantation positions at a spectrometer focal plane

2019

Abstract Fast-timing measurements at the focal plane of a separator can suffer from poor timing resolution. This is due to the variations in time-of-flight (ToF) for photons travelling to a given detector, which arise from the changes in the implantation positions of the recoil nuclei emitting the γ rays of interest. In order to minimise these effects on timing measurements, a procedure is presented that improves fast-timing data by performing ToF corrections on an event-by-event basis. This method was used to correct data collected with an array of eight LaBr 3 detectors, which detected γ rays from spatially distributed 138Gd recoil-implants at the focal plane of the Recoil-Ion-Transport-U…

Nuclear and High Energy PhysicsPhotonGeneralised-centroid-difference methodtutkimuslaitteetspektrometritStandard deviation138GdRecoilgeneralised-centroid-difference methodDistributed sourceNuclear ExperimentNuclear-state lifetimesInstrumentationdetectorsPhysicsnuclear-state lifetimesta114Spectrometerfast-timingDetectorCentroidFast-timingLaBr3Computational physicsTime of flightCardinal pointdistributed sourceydinfysiikkaNuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section A: Accelerators, Spectrometers, Detectors and Associated Equipment
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A charge plunger device to measure the lifetimes of excited nuclear states where transitions are dominated by internal conversion

2020

A charge plunger device has been commissioned based on the DPUNS plunger (Taylor et al., 2013) using the in-flight mass separator MARA at the University of Jyväskylä. The 152Sm(32S,4n)180Pt reaction was used to populate excited states in 180Pt. A lifetime measurement of the 21+ state was performed by applying the charge plunger technique, which relies on the detection of the charge state-distribution of recoils rather than the detection of the emitted γ rays. This state was a good candidate to test the charge plunger technique as it has a known lifetime and depopulates through a converted transition that competes strongly with γ-ray emission. The lifetime of the 21+ state was measured to be…

RDDSDDCMnuclear-state lifetimescharge plungerydinfysiikkaplunger
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