Using spin alignment of inelastically-excited fast beams to make spin assignments: the spectroscopy of 13O as a test case

Excited states in 13O were investigated using inelastic scattering of an E/A=69.5-MeV 13O beam off of a 9Be target. The excited states were identified in the invariant-mass spectra of the decay products. Both single proton and sequential two-proton decays of the excited states were examined. For a n...

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Published inarXiv.org
Main Authors Charity, R J, Webb, T B, Elson, J M, Hoff, D E M, Pruitt, C D, Sobotka, L G, Navratil, P, Hupin, G, Kravvaris, K, Quaglioni, S, Brown, K W, Cerizza, G, Estee, J, Lynch, W G, Manfredi, J, Morfouace, P, Santamaria, C, Sweany, S, Tsang, M B, Tsang, T, Zhu, K, Kuvin, S A, McNeel, D, Smith, J, Wousmaa, A H, Chajecki, Z
Format Paper Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Ithaca Cornell University Library, arXiv.org 07.07.2021
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Summary:Excited states in 13O were investigated using inelastic scattering of an E/A=69.5-MeV 13O beam off of a 9Be target. The excited states were identified in the invariant-mass spectra of the decay products. Both single proton and sequential two-proton decays of the excited states were examined. For a number of the excited states, the protons were emitted with strong anisotropy where emissions transverse to the beam axis are favored. The measured proton-decay angular distributions were compared to predictions from distorted-wave born-approximation (DWBA) calculations of the spin alignment which was shown to be largely independent of the excitation mechanism. The deduced \(^{13}\)O level scheme is compared to ab initio no-core shell model with continuum (NCSMC) predictions. The lowest-energy excited states decay isotropically consistent with predictions of strong proton 1s1/2 structure. Above these states in the level scheme, we observed a number of higher-spin states not predicted within the model. Possibly these are associated with rotational bands built on deformed cluster configurations predicted by antisymmetrized molecular dynamics (AMD) calculations. The spin alignment mechanism is shown to be useful for making spin assignments and may have widespread use.
ISSN:2331-8422
DOI:10.48550/arxiv.2107.03346