Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where F. Montes is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by F. Montes.


Physics Letters B | 2008

Observation of non-exponential orbital electron capture decays of hydrogen-like 140Pr and 142Pm ions

Yu. A. Litvinov; F. Bosch; N. Winckler; D. Boutin; H. G. Essel; T. Faestermann; H. Geissel; Sebastian Hess; P. Kienle; R. Knöbel; C. Kozhuharov; J. Kurcewicz; L. Maier; K. Beckert; P. Beller; C. Brandau; L. Chen; C. Dimopoulou; B. Fabian; A. Fragner; E. Haettner; M. Hausmann; S. Litvinov; M. Mazzocco; F. Montes; A. Musumarra; C. Nociforo; F. Nolden; W.R. Plaß; A. Prochazka

Abstract We report on time-modulated two-body weak decays observed in the orbital electron capture of hydrogen-like 140 Pr 59+ and 142 Pm 60+ ions coasting in an ion storage ring. Using non-destructive single ion, time-resolved Schottky mass spectrometry we found that the expected exponential decay is modulated in time with a modulation period of about 7 seconds for both systems. Tentatively this observation is attributed to the coherent superposition of finite mass eigenstates of the electron neutrinos from the weak decay into a two-body final state.


Physical Review Letters | 2007

Measurement of the {beta}{sup +} and Orbital Electron-Capture Decay Rates in Fully Ionized, Hydrogenlike, and Heliumlike {sup 140}Pr Ions

Yu. A. Litvinov; F. Bosch; H. Geissel; J. Kurcewicz; Z. Patyk; N. Winckler; L. Batist; K. Beckert; D. Boutin; C. Brandau; Lie-Wen Chen; C. Dimopoulou; B. Fabian; T. Faestermann; A. Fragner; L. V. Grigorenko; E. Haettner; Sebastian Hess; P. Kienle; R. Knöbel; C. Kozhuharov; S. Litvinov; L. Maier; M. Mazzocco; F. Montes; G. Münzenberg; A. Musumarra; C. Nociforo; F. Nolden; M. Pfützner

We report on the first measurement of the beta+ and orbital electron-capture decay rates of 140Pr nuclei with the simplest electron configurations: bare nuclei, hydrogenlike, and heliumlike ions. The measured electron-capture decay constant of hydrogenlike 140Pr58+ ions is about 50% larger than that of heliumlike 140Pr57+ ions. Moreover, 140Pr ions with one bound electron decay faster than neutral 140Pr0+ atoms with 59 electrons. To explain this peculiar observation one has to take into account the conservation of the total angular momentum, since only particular spin orientations of the nucleus and of the captured electron can contribute to the allowed decay.


Physical Review C | 2009

β-decay half-lives and β-delayed neutron emission probabilities of nuclei in the region A 110, relevant for the r process

J. Pereira; S. Hennrich; A. Aprahamian; O. Arndt; A. Becerril; T. Elliot; A. Estrade; D. Galaviz; R. Kessler; K.-L. Kratz; Giuseppe Lorusso; P. Mantica; M. Matos; Peter Möller; F. Montes; B. Pfeiffer; H. Schatz; F. Schertz; L. Schnorrenberger; E. Smith; A. Stolz; M. Quinn; W. B. Walters; A. Wöhr

Measurements of {beta}-decay properties of A < or approx. 110 r-process nuclei have been completed at the National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory at Michigan State University. {beta}-decay half-lives for {sup 105}Y, {sup 106,107}Zr, and {sup 111}Mo, along with {beta}-delayed neutron emission probabilities of {sup 104}Y, {sup 109,110}Mo and upper limits for {sup 105}Y, {sup 103-107}Zr, and {sup 108,111}Mo have been measured for the first time. Studies on the basis of the quasi-random-phase approximation are used to analyze the ground-state deformation of these nuclei.


Physical Review Letters | 2008

Production and beta decay of rp-process nuclei 96Cd, 98In, and 100Sn.

D. Bazin; F. Montes; A. Becerril; G. Lorusso; A. M. Amthor; T. Baumann; H. L. Crawford; A. Estrade; A. Gade; T. N. Ginter; C. J. Guess; M. Hausmann; G. W. Hitt; P. F. Mantica; M. Matos; R. Meharchand; K. Minamisono; G. Perdikakis; J. Pereira; J. S. Pinter; M. Portillo; H. Schatz; Karl U. Smith; J. B. Stoker; A. Stolz; R. G. T. Zegers

The beta-decay properties of the N=Z nuclei 96Cd, 98In, and 100Sn have been studied. These nuclei were produced at the National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory by fragmenting a 120 MeV/nucleon 112Sn primary beam on a Be target. The resulting radioactive beam was filtered in the A1900 and the newly commissioned Radio Frequency Fragment Separator to achieve a purity level suitable for decay studies. The observed production cross sections of these nuclei are lower than predicted by factors of 10-30. The half-life of 96Cd, which was the last experimentally unknown waiting point half-life of the astrophysical rp process, is 1.03_{-0.21};{+0.24} s. The implications of the experimental T_{1/2} value of 96Cd on the abundances predicted by rp process calculations and the origin of A=96 isobars such as 96Ru are explored.


Physical Review C | 2010

Half-lives and branchings for {beta}-delayed neutron emission for neutron-rich Co-Cu isotopes in the r-process

P. T. Hosmer; H. Schatz; A. Aprahamian; O. Arndt; R.R.C. Clement; A. Estrade; K. Farouqi; K.-L. Kratz; S. N. Liddick; A. F. Lisetskiy; P. F. Mantica; Peter Möller; W. F. Mueller; F. Montes; A. C. Morton; M. Ouellette; E. Pellegrini; J. Pereira; B. Pfeiffer; Paul L. Reeder; Peter A. Santi; M. Steiner; A. Stolz; B. E. Tomlin; W. B. Walters; A. Wöhr

The {beta} decays of very neutron-rich nuclides in the Co-Zn region were studied experimentally at the National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory using the NSCL {beta}-counting station in conjunction with the neutron detector NERO. We measured the branchings for {beta}-delayed neutron emission (P{sub n} values) for {sup 74}Co (18{+-}15%) and {sup 75-77}Ni (10{+-}2.8%, 14{+-}3.6%, and 30{+-}24%, respectively) for the first time, and remeasured the P{sub n} values of {sup 77-79}Cu, {sup 79,81}Zn, and {sup 82}Ga. For {sup 77-79}Cu and for {sup 81}Zn we obtain significantly larger P{sub n} values compared to previous work. While the new half-lives for the Ni isotopes from this experiment had been reported before, we present here in addition the first half-life measurements of {sup 75}Co (30{+-}11 ms) and {sup 80}Cu (170{sub -50}{sup +110} ms). Our results are compared with theoretical predictions, and their impact on various types of models for the astrophysical rapid neutron-capture process (r-process) is explored. We find that with our new data, the classical r-process model is better able to reproduce the A=78-80 abundance pattern inferred from the solar abundances. The new data also influence r-process models based on the neutrino-driven high-entropy winds in core collapse supernovae.


Physical Review Letters | 2008

Production andβDecay ofrp-Process NucleiCd96,In98, andSn100

D. Bazin; F. Montes; A. Becerril; G. Lorusso; A.M. Amthor; T. Baumann; H. L. Crawford; A. Estrade; A. Gade; T. N. Ginter; C. J. Guess; M. Hausmann; G. W. Hitt; P. F. Mantica; M. Matos; R. Meharchand; K. Minamisono; G. Perdikakis; J. Pereira; J. S. Pinter; M. Portillo; H. Schatz; K. J. Smith; J. B. Stoker; A. Stolz; R. G. T. Zegers

The beta-decay properties of the N=Z nuclei 96Cd, 98In, and 100Sn have been studied. These nuclei were produced at the National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory by fragmenting a 120 MeV/nucleon 112Sn primary beam on a Be target. The resulting radioactive beam was filtered in the A1900 and the newly commissioned Radio Frequency Fragment Separator to achieve a purity level suitable for decay studies. The observed production cross sections of these nuclei are lower than predicted by factors of 10-30. The half-life of 96Cd, which was the last experimentally unknown waiting point half-life of the astrophysical rp process, is 1.03_{-0.21};{+0.24} s. The implications of the experimental T_{1/2} value of 96Cd on the abundances predicted by rp process calculations and the origin of A=96 isobars such as 96Ru are explored.


Physical Review C | 2008

Application of the relativistic mean-field mass model to the r-process and the influence of mass uncertainties

B. Sun; F. Montes; L. S. Geng; H. Geissel; Yu. A. Litvinov; J. Meng

A new mass table calculated by the relativistic mean-field approach with the state-dependent BCS method for the pairing correlation is applied for the first time to study r-process nucleosynthesis. The solar r-process abundance is well reproduced within a waiting-point approximation approach. Using an exponential fitting procedure to find the required astrophysical conditions, the influence of mass uncertainty is investigated. The r-process calculations using the FRDM, ETFSI-Q, and HFB-13 mass tables have been used for that purpose. It is found that the nuclear physical uncertainty can significantly influence the deduced astrophysical conditions for the r-process site. In addition, the influence of the shell closure and shape transition have been examined in detail in the r-process simulations.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Classical-NOVA CONTRIBUTION to the Milky Way's ²⁶Al abundance: exit channel of the key ²⁵Al(p,γ) ²⁶Si resonance.

M. B. Bennett; C. Wrede; K. A. Chipps; J. José; S. N. Liddick; M. Santia; A. Bowe; A. A. Chen; N. Cooper; D. Irvine; E. McNeice; F. Montes; F. Naqvi; R. Ortez; Steven D Pain; J. Pereira; C. J. Prokop; J. Quaglia; S. J. Quinn; S. B. Schwartz; S. Shanab; A. Simon; A. Spyrou; E. Thiagalingam

Classical novae are expected to contribute to the 1809-keV Galactic γ-ray emission by producing its precursor 26Al, but the yield depends on the thermonuclear rate of the unmeasured 25Al(p,γ)26Si reaction. Using the β decay of 26P to populate the key J(π)=3(+) resonance in this reaction, we report the first evidence for the observation of its exit channel via a 1741.6±0.6(stat)±0.3(syst)  keV primary γ ray, where the uncertainties are statistical and systematic, respectively. By combining the measured γ-ray energy and intensity with other experimental data on 26Si, we find the center-of-mass energy and strength of the resonance to be E(r)=414.9±0.6(stat)±0.3(syst)±0.6(lit.)  keV and ωγ=23±6(stat)(-10)(+11)(lit.)  meV, respectively, where the last uncertainties are from adopted literature data. We use hydrodynamic nova simulations to model 26Al production showing that these measurements effectively eliminate the dominant experimental nuclear-physics uncertainty and we estimate that novae may contribute up to 30% of the Galactic 26Al.


arXiv: Nuclear Experiment | 2006

Present and Future Experiments with Stored Exotic Nuclei at Relativistic Energies

H. Geissel; Yu. A. Litvinov; B. Pfeiffer; F. Attallah; G. Audi; K. Beckert; P. Beller; F. Bosch; D. Boutin; T. Bürvenich; L. Chen; T. Faestermann; M. Falch; B. Franzke; M. Hausmann; E. Kaza; Th. Kerscher; P. Kienle; O. Klepper; R. Knöbel; C. Kozhuharov; K.-L. Kratz; S. A. Litvinov; K.E.G. Löbner; L. Maier; M. Matos; F. Montes; G. Münzenberg; C. Nociforo; F. Nolden

Recent progress is presented from experiments on masses and lifetimes of bare and few‐electron exotic nuclei at GSI. Relativistic rare isotopes produced via projectile fragmentation and fission were separated in flight by the fragment separator FRS and injected into the storage ring ESR. This worldwide unique experimental technique gives access to all fragments with half‐lives down to the microsecond range. The great research potential is also demonstrated by the discovery of new isotopes along with simultaneous measurements of mass and lifetime. Representative results from time‐resolved Schottky mass spectrometry are compared with modern theoretical predictions. The measured isospin dependence of pairing‐gap energies is not reproduced by conventional mass models. The first direct observation of bound‐state beta decay has been achieved. Single particle decay measurements and the continuous recording of both stored mother and daughter nuclei open up a new era for spectroscopy. The combination of stochastic...


Physical Review C | 2012

β-delayed proton emission in the 100Sn region

G. Lorusso; A. Becerril; A. M. Amthor; T. Baumann; D. Bazin; J. S. Berryman; B. A. Brown; Richard H. Cyburt; H. L. Crawford; A. Estrade; A. Gade; T. N. Ginter; C. J. Guess; M. Hausmann; G. W. Hitt; P. F. Mantica; M. Matos; R. Meharchand; K. Minamisono; F. Montes; G. Perdikakis; J. Pereira; M. Portillo; H. Schatz; Karl U. Smith; J. B. Stoker; A. Stolz; R. G. T. Zegers

Beta-delayed proton emission from nuclides in the neighborhood of 100Sn was studied at the National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory. The nuclei were produced by fragmentation of a 120 MeV/nucleon 112Sn primary beam on a Be target. Beam purification was provided by the A1900 Fragment Separator and the Radio Frequency Fragment Separator. The fragments of interest were identified and their decay was studied with the NSCL Beta Counting System (BCS) in conjunction with the Segmented Germanium Array (SeGA). The nuclei 96Cd, 98Ing, 98Inm and 99In were identified as beta-delayed proton emitters, with branching ratios bp = 5.5(40)%, 5.5+3 -2%, 19(2)% and 0.9(4)%, respectively. The bp for 89Ru, 91,92Rh, 93Pd and 95Ag were deduced for the first time with bp = 3+1.9 -1.7%, 1.3(5)%, 1.9(1)%, 7.5(5)% and 2.5(3)%, respectively. The bp = 22(1)% for 101Sn was deduced with higher precision than previously reported. The impact of the newly measured bp values on the composition of the type-I X-ray burst ashes was studied.

Collaboration


Dive into the F. Montes's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

H. Geissel

GSI Helmholtz Centre for Heavy Ion Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

H. Schatz

Michigan State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. Pereira

Michigan State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

L. Caceres

Autonomous University of Madrid

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

D. Bazin

Michigan State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M. Matos

Michigan State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. Gerl

GSI Helmholtz Centre for Heavy Ion Research

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M. Gorska

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. Estrade

Michigan State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M. Hausmann

Michigan State University

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge