1 / 10

ENSDF evaluation for A=260-265

ENSDF evaluation for A=260-265. M. Gupta Manipal University, Manipal, India T. W. Burrows National Nuclear Data Center, Brookhaven National Laboratory, USA. Motivation for evaluation. α -decay mass chains from some heavier nuclei (A≥266) end in this region update of this region is due

fawzia
Download Presentation

ENSDF evaluation for A=260-265

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ENSDF evaluation forA=260-265 M. Gupta Manipal University, Manipal, India T. W. Burrows National Nuclear Data Center, Brookhaven National Laboratory, USA

  2. Motivation for evaluation • α-decay mass chains from some heavier nuclei (A≥266) end in this region • update of this region is due Earlier evaluations of these nuclides in : 1999Ar21, 1999Ak02 and 2001Ak11 265Rf : 2000Fi12 • the same evaluation methodology adopted for (distant) ancestors could be usefully extended to descendents within an α-decay chain for consistency and uniformity of treatment • New results / chemistry

  3. Chart of Nuclides showing A=260-265 region Cold fusion Hot fusion Physics interest: Deformed shell region N ~162-164 A=265 A=260

  4. Guidelines for evaluation: As established in 2005Gu33: International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry, Trans-fermium Working Group (IUPAC-TWG-JWP): R. C. Barber et. al.,Prog. Part. Nucl. Phys., v29, p453-530, 1992 • IUPAC/IUPAP - TWG is concerned with thediscovery of a new element • ENSDF evaluations seek primarily to adopt thebest set of data for a givenisotope Priority of discovery for elements in the A=260-265 region already established by IUPAC/IUPAP-TWG/JWP Guidelines serve well to re-visit older data and evaluate new data within a consistent framework

  5. Data checked for: • Measurement of excitation functions • Cross-bombardments: • changing the relative yields of xn-evaporation channels by • varying mass number of Projectile or Target (useful in “hot • fusion”) • Independent verification by another laboratory • Redundancy and internal consistency of data • Estimates of randomness • Consistency of assignments of daughters: • secured connection to known descendents; (“cold-fusion”) • presence of elemental signatures such as x-rays (in the • absence of mass measurements); • direct measurements of nuclei in the decay chain by • independent chemical studies  determination of Z • T1/2 : larger statistics, better value(results can be ‘combined’)

  6. Statistical determination of uncertainties Where not quoted or for combining /including new data Method of K.-H. Schmidt et. al., Z. Phys. A316, 19, 1984 τu = Upper limit (estimate); τl = lower limit (estimate) tm = average mean time; z = 1 for 68% confidence level; n = # of events Expected accuracy of approximation: within 10%

  7. “Viola-Seaborg” Phenomenology ‘Dubna’ parameter set, obtained by a fit to 65 even-even nuclei: V. E. Viola and G. T. Seaborg, J. Inorg. Nucl. Chem., v28, p741, 1966

  8. A=260-265 • Available data for 31 observed nuclides considered • A = 265 (4); 264 (3); 263 (6); 262 (5); 261 (6); 260 (7) • Experimental details include: • Differences in interpretation of observations for parents and daughters • e.g. 265/266Sg  261/262Rf • Cross-sections • including revisions in cross-sections following re-interpretation of data (e.g. 262/263Db) • Reassignments --- existing data • noted in both original and “re-assigned” data sets • SF: TKE, mass distributions, n-multiplicity • Chemical properties

  9. Chemical studies: A=260-265 region • ~40% nuclides studied using chemistry • Reporting of experimental uncertainties in chemical studies varies with: • Specific chemical techniques used (e.g. parent half-life not measured in some cases) • Motivation for experiment (e.g. measurement for presence or absence of nuclide rather than accurate half-life) • Interpretation of half-lives (e.g. upper or lower limits?) • Properties derived from chemical studies supported if same nuclides are also studied by “physical” techniques • Re-assignments possible due to ambiguities in data

  10. Conclusions • Uniform criteria used to evaluate A=260 – 294 region • Evaluation methodology is internally consistent • Re-visiting ‘old’ data yields useful information • Reveals important experimental parameters vital to adopting the bestdata set in the absence of mass measurements • e.g. cross-sections / excitation function measurements • Atomic properties revealed by chemistry • Chemical methods: • Increased statistics • Independent verification

More Related