Observation of large enhancements of charge exchange cross sections with neutron-rich carbon isotopes
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Oxford University Press
Abstract
Production cross sections of nitrogen isotopes from high-energy (∼950 MeV per nucleon) carbon isotopes on hydrogen and carbon targets have been measured for the first time for a wide range of isotopes (A=12 to 19). The fragment separator FRS at GSI was used to deliver C-isotope beams. The cross sections of the production of N-isotopes were determined by charge measurements of forward-going fragments. The cross sections show a rapid increase with the number of neutrons in the projectile. Since the production of nitrogen is mostly due to charge-exchange (Cex) reactions below the proton separation energies, the present data suggests a concentration of Gamow–Teller and/or Fermi transition strength at low excitation energies for neutron-rich carbon isotopes. It was also observed that the Cex cross sections were enhanced much more strongly for neutron-rich isotopes in the C-target data.
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Tanihata, S. Terashima, R. Kanungo, F. Ameil, J. Atkinson, Y. Ayyad, D. Cortina-Gil, I. Dillmann, A. Estradé, A. Evdokimov, F. Farinon, H. Geissel, G. Guastalla, R. Janik, R. Knoebel, J. Kurcewicz, Yu. A. Litvinov, M. Marta, M. Mostazo, I. Mukha, C. Nociforo, H. J. Ong, S. Pietri, A. Prochazka, C. Scheidenberger, B. Sitar, P. Strmen, M. Takechi, J. Tanaka, H. Toki, J. Vargas, J. S. Winfield, H. Weick, Observation of large enhancements of charge exchange cross sections with neutron-rich carbon isotopes, Progress of Theoretical and Experimental Physics, Volume 2016, Issue 4, April 2016, 043D05, https://doi.org/10.1093/ptep/ptw034
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https://doi.org/10.1093/ptep/ptw034Sponsors
The support of the PR China government and Beihang University under the Thousand Talent program is
gratefully acknowledged. The experiment is partly supported by the grant-in-aid program of the Japanese
government under the contract number 23224008. This project is supported by NSERC, Canada
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© The Author(s) 2016. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Physical Society of Japan. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited








