13 results on '"Deibel, C. M."'
Search Results
2. High-Sensitivity Measurement of 3He-4He Isotopic Ratios for Ultracold Neutron Experiments
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Mumm, H. P., Huber, M. G., Bauder, W., Abrams, N., Deibel, C. M, Huffer, C. R., Huffman, P. R., Schelhammer, K. W., Janssens, R., Jiang, C. L., Scott, R. H., Pardo, R. C., Rehm, K. E., Vondrasek, R., Swank, C. M., O'Shaughnessy, C. M., Paul, M., and Yang, L.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Instrumentation and Detectors (physics.ins-det) ,Nuclear Experiment (nucl-ex) ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
Research efforts ranging from studies of solid helium to searches for a neutron electric dipole moment require isotopically purified helium with a ratio of 3He to 4He at levels below that which can be measured using traditional mass spectroscopy techniques. We demonstrate an approach to such a measurement using accelerator mass spectroscopy, reaching the 10e-14 level of sensitivity, several orders of magnitude more sensitive than other techniques. Measurements of 3He/4He in samples relevant to the measurement of the neutron lifetime indicate the need for substantial corrections. We also argue that there is a clear path forward to sensitivity increases of at least another order of magnitude., Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures
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- 2015
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3. Constraining nova observables: direct measurements of resonance strengths in 33S(p,��)34Cl
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Fallis, J., Parikh, A., Bertone, P. F., Bishop, S., Buchmann, L., Chen, A. A., Christian, G., Clark, J. A., D'Auria, J. M., Davids, B., Deibel, C. M., Fulton, B. R., Greife, U., Guo, B., Hager, U., Herlitzius, C., Hutcheon, D. A., Jos��, J., Laird, A. M., Li, E. T., Li, Z. H., Lian, G., Liu, W. P., Martin, L., Nelson, K., Ottewell, D., Parker, P. D., Reeve, S., Rojas, A., Ruiz, C., Setoodehnia, K., Sjue, S., Vockenhuber, C., Wang, Y. B., and Wrede, C.
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FOS: Physical sciences ,Nuclear Experiment (nucl-ex) ,Solar and Stellar Astrophysics (astro-ph.SR) - Abstract
The 33S(p,��)34Cl reaction is important for constraining predictions of certain isotopic abundances in oxygen-neon novae. Models currently predict as much as 150 times the solar abundance of 33S in oxygen-neon nova ejecta. This overproduction factor may, however, vary by orders of magnitude due to uncertainties in the 33S(p,��)34Cl reaction rate at nova peak temperatures. Depending on this rate, 33S could potentially be used as a diagnostic tool for classifying certain types of presolar grains. Better knowledge of the 33S(p,��)34Cl rate would also aid in interpreting nova observations over the S-Ca mass region and contribute to the firm establishment of the maximum endpoint of nova nucleosynthesis. Additionally, the total S elemental abundance which is affected by this reaction has been proposed as a thermometer to study the peak temperatures of novae. Previously, the 33S(p,��)34Cl reaction rate had only been studied directly down to resonance energies of 432 keV. However, for nova peak temperatures of 0.2-0.4 GK there are 7 known states in 34Cl both below the 432 keV resonance and within the Gamow window that could play a dominant role. Direct measurements of the resonance strengths of these states were performed using the DRAGON recoil separator at TRIUMF. Additionally two new states within this energy region are reported. Several hydrodynamic simulations have been performed, using all available experimental information for the 33S(p,��)34Cl rate, to explore the impact of the remaining uncertainty in this rate on nucleosynthesis in nova explosions. These calculations give a range of ~ 20-150 for the expected 33S overproduction factor, and a range of ~ 100-450 for the 32S/33S ratio expected in ONe novae., 12 pages, 8 figures, Accepted for publication in Physical Review C
- Published
- 2013
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4. Is ��-ray emission from novae affected by interference effects in the 18F(p,��)15O reaction?
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Laird, A. M., Parikh, A., Murphy, A. St. J., Wimmer, K., Chen, A. A., Deibel, C. M., Faestermann, T., Fox, S. P., Fulton, B. R., Hertenberger, R., Irvine, D., Jos��, J., Longland, R., Mountford, D., Sambrook, B., Seiler, D., and Wirth, H. -F.
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FOS: Physical sciences ,Nuclear Experiment (nucl-ex) ,Solar and Stellar Astrophysics (astro-ph.SR) - Abstract
The 18F(p,��)15O reaction rate is crucial for constraining model predictions of the ��-ray observable radioisotope 18F produced in novae. The determination of this rate is challenging due to particular features of the level scheme of the compound nucleus, 19Ne, which result in interference effects potentially playing a significant role. The dominant uncertainty in this rate arises from interference between J��=3/2+ states near the proton threshold (Sp = 6.411 MeV) and a broad J��=3/2+ state at 665 keV above threshold. This unknown interference term results in up to a factor of 40 uncertainty in the astrophysical S-factor at nova temperatures. Here we report a new measurement of states in this energy region using the 19F(3He,t)19Ne reaction. In stark contrast with previous assumptions we find at least 3 resonances between the proton threshold and Ecm=50 keV, all with different angular distributions. None of these are consistent with J��= 3/2+ angular distributions. We find that the main uncertainty now arises from the unknown proton-width of the 48 keV resonance, not from possible interference effects. Hydrodynamic nova model calculations performed indicate that this unknown width affects 18F production by at least a factor of two in the model considered., 5 pages, 4 figures. Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. Lett
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- 2012
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5. Neutron pair correlations in A=100 nuclei involved in neutrinoless double-$��$ decay
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Thomas, J. S., Freeman, S. J., Deibel, C. M., Faestermann, T., Hertenberger, R., Kay, B. P., McAllister, S. A., Mitchell, A. J., Schiffer, J. P., Sharp, D. K., and Wirth, H. F.
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FOS: Physical sciences ,Nuclear Experiment (nucl-ex) - Abstract
The pairing properties of the neutrinoless double beta decay $(0\nu2��)$ candidate $^{100}$Mo have been studied, along with its daughter $^{100}$Ru, to provide input for nuclear matrix element calculations relevant to the decay. The $(p,t)$ two-neutron transfer reaction was measured on nuclei of $^{102,100}$Ru and $^{100,98}$Mo. The experiment was designed to have particular sensitivity to $0^{+}$ states up to excitation energies of $\sim 3$ MeV with high energy resolution. Measurements were made at two angles and L=0 transitions identified by the ratio of yields between the two angles. For the reactions leading to and from $^{100}$Ru, greater than 95% of the L=0 $(p,t)$ strength was in the ground state, but in $^{100}$Mo about 20% was in excited $0^{+}$ states. The measured $(p,t)$ data, together with existing $(t,p)$ data, suggest that $^{100}$Mo is a shape-transitional nucleus while $^{100}$Ru is closer to the spherical side of that transition. Theoretical calculations of the $0\nu2��$ nuclear matrix element may be complicated by this difference in shape., 5 pages, 2 figures
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- 2012
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6. Unbound states of 32Cl and the 31S(p,��)32Cl reaction rate
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Mato��, M., Blackmon, J. C., Linhardt, L. E., Bardayan, D. W., Nesaraja, C. D., Clark, J. A., Deibel, C. M., O'Malley, P. D., and Parker, P. D.
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FOS: Physical sciences ,Nuclear Experiment (nucl-ex) ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The 31S(p,��)32Cl reaction is expected to provide the dominant break-out path from the SiP cycle in novae and is important for understanding enrichments of sulfur observed in some nova ejecta. We studied the 32S(3He,t)32Cl charge-exchange reaction to determine properties of proton-unbound levels in 32Cl that have previously contributed significant uncertainties to the 31S(p,��)32Cl reaction rate. Measured triton magnetic rigidities were used to determine excitation energies in 32Cl. Proton-branching ratios were obtained by detecting decay protons from unbound 32Cl states in coincidence with tritons. An improved 31S(p,��)32Cl reaction rate was calculated including robust statistical and systematic uncertainties.
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- 2011
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7. Production of 26Al in stellar hydrogen-burning environments: spectroscopic properties of states in 27Si
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Parikh, A., Wimmer, K., Faestermann, T., Hertenberger, R., Wirth, H. -F., Chen, A. A., Clark, J. A., Deibel, C. M., Herlitzius, C., Krucken, R., Seiler, D., Setoodehnia, K., Straub, K., and Wrede, C.
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Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics ,Astrophysics::High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Nuclear Experiment (nucl-ex) ,Nuclear Experiment ,Solar and Stellar Astrophysics (astro-ph.SR) - Abstract
Model predictions of the amount of the radioisotope 26Al produced in hydrogen-burning environments require reliable estimates of the thermonuclear rates for the 26gAl(p,{\gamma})27Si and 26mAl(p,{\gamma})27Si reactions. These rates depend upon the spectroscopic properties of states in 27Si within about 1 MeV of the 26gAl+p threshold (Sp = 7463 keV). We have studied the 28Si(3He,{\alpha})27Si reaction at 25 MeV using a high-resolution quadrupole-dipole-dipole-dipole magnetic spectrograph. For the first time with a transfer reaction, we have constrained J{\pi} values for states in 27Si over Ex = 7.0 - 8.1 MeV through angular distribution measurements. Aside from a few important cases, we generally confirm the energies and spin-parity assignments reported in a recent {\gamma}-ray spectroscopy study. The magnitudes of neutron spectroscopic factors determined from shell-model calculations are in reasonable agreement with our experimental values extracted using this reaction., Comment: accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. C
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- 2011
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8. Double-beta decay Q values of 130Te, 128Te, and 120Te
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Scielzo, N. D., Caldwell, S., Savard, G., Clark, J. A., Deibel, C. M., Fallis, J., Gulick, S., Lascar, D., Levand, A. F., Li, G., Mintz, J., Norman, E. B., Sharma, K. S., Sternberg, M., Sun, T., and Van Schelt, J.
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FOS: Physical sciences ,Nuclear Experiment (nucl-ex) ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The double-beta decay Q values of 130Te, 128Te, and 120Te have been determined from parent-daughter mass differences measured with the Canadian Penning Trap mass spectrometer. The 132Xe-129Xe mass difference, which is precisely known, was also determined to confirm the accuracy of these results. The 130Te Q value was found to be 2527.01(32) keV which is 3.3 keV lower than the 2003 Atomic Mass Evaluation recommended value, but in agreement with the most precise previous measurement. The uncertainty has been reduced by a factor of 6 and is now significantly smaller than the resolution achieved or foreseen in experimental searches for neutrinoless double-beta decay. The 128Te and 120Te Q values were found to be 865.87(131) keV and 1714.81(125) keV, respectively. For 120Te, this reduction in uncertainty of nearly a factor of 8 opens up the possibility of using this isotope for sensitive searches for neutrinoless double-electron capture and electron capture with positron emission., Comment: 5 pages, 2 figures, submitted to Physical Review Letters
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- 2009
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9. Nuclear Structure Relevant to Neutrinoless Double Beta Decay: the Valence Protons in 76Ge and 76Se
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Kay, B. P., Schiffer, J. P., Freeman, S. J., Adachi, T., Clark, J. A., Deibel, C. M., Fujita, H., Fujita, Y., Grabmayr, P., Hatanaka, K., Ishikawa, D., Matsubara, H., Meada, Y., Okamura, H., Rehm, K. E., Sakemi, Y., Shimizu, Y., Shimoda, H., Suda, K., Tameshige, Y., Tamii, A., and Wrede, C.
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Nuclear Theory ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Nuclear Experiment (nucl-ex) ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
The possibility of observing neutrinoless double beta decay offers the opportunity of determining the effective neutrino mass if the nuclear matrix element were known. Theoretical calculations are uncertain and the occupations of valence orbits by nucleons active in the decay are likely to be important. The occupation of valence proton orbits in the ground states of 76Ge, a candidate for such decay, and 76Se, the corresponding daughter nucleus, were determined by precisely measuring cross sections for proton-removing transfer reactions. As in previous work on neutron occupations, we find that the Fermi surface for protons is much more diffuse than previously thought, and the occupancies of at least three orbits change significantly between the two 0+ ground states., Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures
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- 2008
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10. The33S(p,γ)34Cl reaction in classical nova explosions
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Parikh, A., Thomas Faestermann, Krüken, R., Bildstein, V., Bishop, S., Eppinger, K., Herlitzius, C., Lepyoshkina, O., Maierbeck, P., Seiler, D., Wimmer, K., Hertenberger, R., Wirth, H. -F, Fallis, J., Hager, U., Hutcheon, D., Ruiz, C., Buchmann, L., Ottewell, D., Freeman, B., Wrede, C., García, A., Delbridge, B., Knecht, A., Sallaska, A., Chen, A. A., Clark, J. A., Deibel, C. M., Fulton, B., Laird, A., Greife, U., Guo, B., Li, E. -T, Li, Z. -H, Lian, G., Wang, Y. -B, Liu, W. -P, Parker, P. D., and Setoodehnia, K.
11. Studying the (α, p)-process in X-ray bursts using radioactive ion beams
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Deibel, C. M., Alcorta, M., Bertone, P. F., Clark, J. A., Greene, J., Hoffman, C. R., Jiang, C. L., Kay, B. P., Lee, H. -Y, Pardo, R. C., Rehm, K. E., Rogers, A., Ugalde, C., Zinkann, G., Bedoor, S., Shetty, D. V., Wuosmaa, A. H., Lighthall, J. C., Scott Marley, Patel, N. R., Figueira, J. M., and Paul, M.
12. Development of a radiofrequency linear ion trap for β decay study
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Li, G., Nicholas Scielzo, Segel, R. E., Bertone, P. F., Buchinger, F., Caldwell, S., Chaudhuri, A., Clark, J. A., Crawford, J. E., Deibel, C. M., Fallis, J., Gulick, S., Gwinner, G., Lascar, D., Levand, A. F., Pedretti, M., Savard, G., Seweryniak, D., Sharma, K. S., Schelt, J., Sternberg, M. G., Sun, T., Wuosmaa, A. H., and Yee, R.
13. The 33S(p,γ)34Cl reaction in classical nova explosions
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Parikh, A., Faestermann, T., Krüken, R., Bildstein, V., Bishop, S., Eppinger, K., Herlitzius, C., Lepyoshkina, O., Maierbeck, P., Seiler, D., Wimmer, K., Hertenberger, R., Wirth, H. -F, Fallis, J., Hager, U., Hutcheon, D., Ruiz, C., Buchmann, L., Ottewell, D., Freeman, B., Wrede, C., García, A., Delbridge, B., Andreas Knecht, Sallaska, A., Chen, A. A., Clark, J. A., Deibel, C. M., Fulton, B., Laird, A., Greife, U., Guo, B., Li, E. -T, Li, Z. -H, Lian, G., Wang, Y. -B, Liu, W. -P, Parker, P. D., and Setoodehnia, K.
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