Events in our system are self-managed.  Group and event managers are encouraged to review privacy and security settings, and adjust them if needed.  If you need assistance please contact Indico Support - contact Help at bottom of page. https://learn.getindico.io/categories/managing/

10–15 Jul 2016
St. Mary's University
US/Pacific timezone

Two-neutron transfer reactions as a probe of isospin mixing effects in superallowed beta decay

12 Jul 2016, 11:45
15m
Scotiabank Theatre (St. Mary's University)

Scotiabank Theatre

St. Mary's University

923 Robie Street Halifax Nova Scotia
Contributed Oral/Poster Shell evolution through direct reactions - Spectroscopy of nuclear levels and nuclear shapes through direct reactions

Speaker

Prof. Kyle Leach (Colorado School of Mines)

Description

As part of an ongoing program to study fundamental symmetries in nuclear physics, superallowed Fermi $0^+\rightarrow0^+$ $\beta$ decay provides by far the most precise determination of the vector coupling constant for the weak interaction, $G_V$. Currently, the precision on the extraction of this quantity from the superallowed data is limited by theoretical corrections that must be applied. These corrections are difficult to calculate, and those that rely on nuclear-structure theory require benchmarking to experimental data. Of particular interest to the isospin-symmetry-breaking (ISB) portion of these theoretical corrections is the degree to which isospin mixing occurs between the isobaric analogue state and other excited $0^+$ states. These measurements are particularly difficult for intermediate-mass nuclei, where the superallowed $\beta$ decay $Q$-value windows are very large, and $0^+$ states with very low reaction cross-sections (~few $\mu$b/sr) must be mapped to several MeV. Our recent two-neutron transfer work on both the $A=62$ and $A=50$ superallowed systems have shown discrepancies in both the number and energy of previously assigned $0^+$ states, thus impacting the magnitude of the currently adopted ISB corrections for these nuclei. These results will be presented, as well as implications of this work for the extraction of $G_V$ from the superallowed data.

Primary author

Prof. Kyle Leach (Colorado School of Mines)

Presentation materials

There are no materials yet.