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Fine Structure of the Isovector Giant Dipole Resonance in $^{142-150}$Nd and $^{152}$Sm

Authors :
Donaldson, L. M.
Carter, J.
von Neumann-Cosel, P.
Nesterenko, V. O.
Neveling, R.
Reinhard, P. -G.
Usman, I. T.
Adsley, P.
Bertulani, C. A.
Brümmer, J. W.
Buthelezi, E. Z.
Cooper, G. R. J.
Fearick, R. W.
Förtsch, S. V.
Fujita, H.
Fujita, Y.
Jingo, M.
Kheswa, N. Y.
Kleinig, W.
Kureba, C. O.
Kvasil, J.
Latif, M.
Li, K. C. W.
Mira, J. P.
Nemulodi, F.
Papka, P.
Pellegri, L.
Pietralla, N.
Ponomarev, V. Yu.
Rebeiro, B.
Richter, A.
Shirikova, N. Yu.
Sideras-Haddad, E.
Sushkov, A. V.
Smit, F. D.
Steyn, G. F.
Swartz, J. A.
Tamii, A.
Source :
Phys. Rev. C 102, 064327 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Background: Inelastic proton scattering at energies of a few hundred MeV and very-forward angles including $0^\circ$ has been established as a tool to study electric-dipole strength distributions in nuclei. The present work reports a systematic investigation of the chain of stable even-mass Nd isotopes representing a transition from spherical to quadrupole-deformed nuclei. Purpose: Extraction of the equivalent photo-absorption cross sections and analysis of their fine structure in the energy region of the IsoVector Giant Dipole Resonance (IVGDR). Method: Proton inelastic scattering reactions of 200 MeV protons were measured at iThemba LABS in Cape Town, South Africa. The scattering products were momentum-analysed by the K600 magnetic spectrometer positioned at $\theta_{\mathrm{Lab}}=0^\circ$. Using dispersion-matching techniques, energy resolutions of $\Delta E \approx 40 - 50$ keV were obtained. After subtraction of background and contributions from other multipoles, the spectra were converted to photo-absorption cross sections using the equivalent virtual-photon method. Results: Wavelet-analysis techniques are used to extract characteristic energy scales of the fine structure of the IVGDR from the experimental data. Comparisons with the Quasiparticle-Phonon Model (QPM) and Skyrme Separable Random Phase Approximation (SSRPA) predictions provide insight into the role of different giant resonance damping mechanisms. Conclusions: Fine structure is observed even for the most deformed nuclei studied. Fragmentation of the one particle-one hole ($1p1h$) strength seems to be the main source of fine structure in both spherical and deformed nuclei. Some impact of the spreading due to coupling of the two particle-two hole ($2p2h$) states to the $1p1h$ doorway states is seen in the spherical/transitional nuclei, where calculations beyond the $1p1h$ level are available.<br />Comment: 17 pages, 17 figures; Minor changes made such as those clarifying the descriptions of the analysis procedure, but the results are unchanged. The current version was accepted for publication by PRC on 7 December 2020

Subjects

Subjects :
Nuclear Experiment

Details

Database :
arXiv
Journal :
Phys. Rev. C 102, 064327 (2020)
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2010.01210
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevC.102.064327