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New Short-Lived Isotope ^{221}U and the Mass Surface Near N=126

Authors :
Khuyagbaatar, J.
Yakushev, A.
Düllmann, Ch. E.
Ackermann, D.
Andersson, L.-L.
Block, M.
Brand, H.
Cox, D. M.
Even, J.
Forsberg, Ulrika
Golubev, Pavel
Hartmann, W.
Herzberg, R.-D.
Heßberger, F. P.
Hoffmann, J.
Hübner, A.
Jäger, E.
Jeppsson, J.
Kindler, B.
Kratz, J. V.
Krier, J.
Kurz, N.
Lommel, B.
Maiti, M.
Minami, S.
Mistry, A. K.
Mrosek, Ch. M.
Pysmenetska, I.
Rudolph, Dirk
Sarmiento, Luis
Schaffner, H.
Schädel, M.
Schausten, B.
Steiner, J.
De Heidenreich, T. Torres
Uusitalo, J.
Wegrzecki, M.
Wiehl, N.
Yakusheva, V.
Source :
Physical Review Letters; 115(24), no 242502 (2015)
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Two short-lived isotopes ^{221}U and ^{222}U were produced as evaporation residues in the fusion reaction ^{50}Ti+^{176}Yb at the gas-filled recoil separator TASCA. An α decay with an energy of E_{α}=9.31(5) MeV and half-life T_{1/2}=4.7(7) μs was attributed to ^{222}U. The new isotope ^{221}U was identified in α-decay chains starting with E_{α}=9.71(5) MeV and T_{1/2}=0.66(14) μs leading to known daughters. Synthesis and detection of these unstable heavy nuclei and their descendants were achieved thanks to a fast data readout system. The evolution of the N=126 shell closure and its influence on the stability of uranium isotopes are discussed within the framework of α-decay reduced width.

Details

ISSN :
10797114
Volume :
115
Issue :
24
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Physical review letters
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....85f2851e2ab6db45fd19fbdee952524d