Physical Review Accelerators and Beams (Dec 2018)

^{38}K isomer production via fast fragmentation

  • K. A. Chipps,
  • R. L. Kozub,
  • C. Sumithrarachchi,
  • T. Ginter,
  • T. Baumann,
  • K. Lund,
  • A. Lapierre,
  • A. Villari,
  • F. Montes,
  • S. Jin,
  • K. Schmidt,
  • S. Ayoub,
  • S. D. Pain,
  • D. Blankstein

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevAccelBeams.21.121301
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 12
p. 121301

Abstract

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In radioactive ion beam experiments, beams containing isomers can be of interest in probing nuclear structure and informing astrophysical reaction rates. While the production of mixed in-flight ground state and isomer beams using nucleon transfer can be generally understood through distorted wave Born approximation methodology, low-spin isomer production via fast fragmentation is relatively unstudied. To attain a practical understanding of low-spin isomer production using fast fragmentation beams, a test case of ^{38}K/^{38m}K was studied at the National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory’s ReAccelerated Beam facility. Starting from lise++ predictions, the fragmentation momentum distribution was sampled to determine isomer production. In addition, the effects of the gas stopper gradient and charge breeding times were examined. In the case of ^{38}K, isomer production peaks at ∼57%. This maximum is observed just off the lise++ predicted optimum magnetic rigidity, with only small losses in beam intensity within a few percent of this optimum rigidity setting. Control of the isomer fraction was also achieved through the modification of charge breeding times. Fast fragmentation appears to be a feasible method for production of low-spin isomeric beams, but additional study is necessary to better describe the mechanism involved.