3-7 July 2017
Africa/Johannesburg timezone

Resonances in odd-odd 182Ta

5 Jul 2017, 10:00
20m
A406 (Engineering Building 51)

A406

Engineering Building 51

Oral Presentation Track B - Nuclear, Particle and Radiation Physics Nuclear, Particle and Radiation Physics 1

Speaker

Mr C.P. Brits (iThemba LABS)

Description

Relatively small resonances on the low-energy tail of the giant electric dipole resonance such as the scissors or pygmy resonances can have significant impact on reaction rates. These rates are important input for modelling processes that take place in astrophysical environments and nuclear reactors. Recent results from the University of Oslo indicate the existence of a significant enhancement in the photon strength function for nuclei in the actinide region due to the scissors resonance [1]. Further, the M1 strength distribution of scissors resonances in rare earth nuclei has been studied extensively over the years [2]. In order to investigate the extent and persistence of the scissor resonance in other mass regions, an experiment was performed utilizing the NaI(Tl) gamma-ray detector array (CACTUS) and silicon particle telescopes (SiRi) at the cyclotron laboratory at the University of Oslo. Particle-gamma coincidences from the 181Ta(d,p)182Ta reaction were used to measure the nuclear level density and photon strength function of the well-deformed 182Ta system, to investigate the existence of resonances below the neutron separation energy. In this talk I will present and discuss the final results of this investigation and place our findings in the context of previous work. [1] M. Guttormsen et al. Phys. Rev. Lett. 109, 162503 (2012). [2] P. von-Neumann-Cosel, K. Heyde, and A. Richter, Rev. Mod. Phys., 82, 2365, (2010). This work is based on the research supported in part by the National Research Foundation of South Africa Grant Number 92600.

Would you like to <br> submit a short paper <br> for the Conference <br> Proceedings (Yes / No)?

No

Apply to be<br> considered for a student <br> &nbsp; award (Yes / No)?

No

Main supervisor (name and email)<br>and his / her institution

Dr. Mathis Wiedeking
wiedeking@tlabs.ac.za
iThemba LABS

Level for award<br>&nbsp;(Hons, MSc, <br> &nbsp; PhD, N/A)?

N/A

Primary author

Mr C.P. Brits (iThemba LABS)

Co-authors

Prof. A. Gorgen (University of Oslo) Dr A.C. Larsen (University of Oslo) Mr Bonginkosi Kheswa (iThemba LABS) Dr D. Bleuel (Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, USA) Dr E. Sahin (University of Oslo) Dr F. Giacoppo (University of Oslo) Mr F.B. Zeiser (University of Oslo) Mr F.L. Bello Garrotte (University of Oslo) Dr G.M. Tveten (University of Oslo) Dr H.T. Nyhus (University of Oslo) Dr K. HADYNSKA-KLEK (University of Oslo) Mr Kgashane Malatji (iThemba LABS) Prof. M. Guttormsen (University of Oslo) Ms M. KLINTEFJORD (University of Oslo) Dr Mathis Wiedeking (iThemba LABS) Dr Paul Papka (Stellenbosch University) Prof. S Siem (University of Oslo) Ms S. Rose (University of Oslo) Ms T. Renstrom (University of Oslo) Ms T.W. Hagen (University of Oslo) Mr V.W. Ingeberg (University of Oslo)

Presentation Materials

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