Structure of the neutron-halo nucleus He6

J. Jänecke, T. Annakkage, G. P. A. Berg, B. A. Brown, J. A. Brown, G. Crawley, S. Danczyk, M. Fujiwara, D. J. Mercer, K. Pham, D. A. Roberts, J. Stasko, J. S. Winfield, and G. H. Yoo
Phys. Rev. C 54, 1070 – Published 1 September 1996
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Abstract

The Li6(7Li,7Be)6He charge-exchange reaction leading to the neutron-halo nucleus He6 has been studied at E(7Li) = 350 MeV. Magnetic analysis was used to observe transitions to the known Jπ = 0+ ground state and the Jπ = 2+ state at Ex = 1.8 MeV as well as pronounced resonances at ∼5.6 MeV, ∼14.6 MeV, and ∼23.3 MeV. Coincidences with 430-keV Doppler-shifted γ rays from the deexcitation in flight of the Jπ = 1/2 first-excited state in Be7 were measured to permit the identification of spin-flip transitions. All observed transitions appear to have spin-flip characteristics. The shapes of the experimental angular distributions from θc.m. = 0° to 18° are well described by microscopic one-step finite-range distorted-wave calculations with theoretical shell-model transition amplitudes. For the two low-lying shell-model states the absolute cross sections are also well described. The internal structures of the projectile and ejectile are taken into consideration. A large number of contributions is permitted by the angular momentum couplings. Only the ground state of He6 carries significant Gamow-Teller strength B(GT). Contributions with higher L values from the central spin flip and the tensor interactions Vστ and VTτ are responsible for the mostly structureless distributions observed, and the 0° cross sections are not proportional to B(GT). The strong resonances at ∼5.6 MeV and ∼14.6 MeV are interpreted as 2+ and (1,2) resonances, respectively, with cross sections stronger than predicted presumably due to mixing with continuum states leading to quadrupole and dipole enhancements. It appears that the resonance at ∼5.6 MeV does not represent a soft dipole mode originally predicted at Ex=4–7 MeV. © 1996 The American Physical Society.

  • Received 22 January 1996

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevC.54.1070

©1996 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

J. Jänecke, T. Annakkage, G. P. A. Berg, B. A. Brown, J. A. Brown, G. Crawley, S. Danczyk, M. Fujiwara, D. J. Mercer, K. Pham, D. A. Roberts, J. Stasko, J. S. Winfield, and G. H. Yoo

  • Department of Physics, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1120
  • Indiana University Cyclotron Facility, Bloomington, Indiana 47408
  • National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory, Michigan State University, East Lansing, Michigan 48824
  • Research Center for Nuclear Physics, Osaka University, Osaka 567, Japan

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Vol. 54, Iss. 3 — September 1996

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