M. Scott
Michigan State University
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Featured researches published by M. Scott.
Physical Review Letters | 2015
Z. Meisel; S. George; S. Ahn; D. Bazin; B. A. Brown; J. Browne; J.F. Carpino; H. Chung; A.L. Cole; Richard H. Cyburt; A. Estrade; M. Famiano; A. Gade; C. Langer; M. Matos; W. Mittig; F. Montes; D. J. Morrissey; J. Pereira; H. Schatz; J. Schatz; M. Scott; D. Shapira; K. Smith; J. Stevens; Wanpeng Tan; O. B. Tarasov; S. Towers; K. Wimmer; J. Winkelbauer
We present the mass excesses of (52-57)Sc, obtained from recent time-of-flight nuclear mass measurements at the National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory at Michigan State University. The masses of 56Sc and 57Sc were determined for the first time with atomic mass excesses of -24.85(59)((-54)(+0)) MeV and -21.0(1.3) MeV, respectively, where the asymmetric uncertainty for 56Sc was included due to possible contamination from a long-lived isomer. The 56Sc mass indicates a small odd-even mass staggering in the A = 56 mass chain towards the neutron drip line, significantly deviating from trends predicted by the global FRDM mass model and favoring trends predicted by the UNEDF0 and UNEDF1 density functional calculations. Together with new shell-model calculations of the electron-capture strength function of 56Sc, our results strongly reduce uncertainties in model calculations of the heating and cooling at the 56Ti electron-capture layer in the outer crust of accreting neutron stars. We find that, in contrast to previous studies, neither strong neutrino cooling nor strong heating occurs in this layer. We conclude that Urca cooling in the outer crusts of accreting neutron stars that exhibit superbursts or high temperature steady-state burning, which are predicted to be rich in A≈56 nuclei, is considerably weaker than predicted. Urca cooling must instead be dominated by electron capture on the small amounts of adjacent odd-A nuclei contained in the superburst and high temperature steady-state burning ashes. This may explain the absence of strong crust Urca cooling inferred from the observed cooling light curve of the transiently accreting x-ray source MAXI J0556-332.
Physical Review Letters | 2015
Z. Meisel; S. George; S. Ahn; J. Browne; D. Bazin; B. A. Brown; J.F. Carpino; H. Chung; Richard H. Cyburt; A. Estrade; M. Famiano; A. Gade; C. Langer; M. Matos; W. Mittig; F. Montes; D. J. Morrissey; J. Pereira; H. Schatz; J. Schatz; M. Scott; D. Shapira; K. Smith; J. Stevens; Wanpeng Tan; O. B. Tarasov; S. Towers; K. Wimmer; J. Winkelbauer; J. Yurkon
We present results from recent time-of-flight nuclear mass measurements at the National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory at Michigan State University. We report the first mass measurements of ^{48}Ar and ^{49}Ar and find atomic mass excesses of -22.28(31) MeV and -17.8(1.1) MeV, respectively. These masses provide strong evidence for the closed shell nature of neutron number N=28 in argon, which is therefore the lowest even-Z element exhibiting the N=28 closed shell. The resulting trend in binding-energy differences, which probes the strength of the N=28 shell, compares favorably with shell-model calculations in the sd-pf shell using SDPF-U and SDPF-MU Hamiltonians.
Physical Review C | 2017
Wei Jia Ong; C. Langer; F. Montes; A. Aprahamian; D. W. Bardayan; D. Bazin; B. A. Brown; J. Browne; H. L. Crawford; Richard H. Cyburt; E. B. Deleeuw; C. Domingo-Pardo; A. Gade; S. George; P. Hosmer; L. Keek; A. Kontos; I. Y. Lee; A. Lemasson; E. Lunderberg; Y. Maeda; M. Matos; Z. Meisel; S. Noji; F. M. Nunes; A. Nystrom; G. Perdikakis; J. Pereira; S. J. Quinn; F. Recchia
The low-lying energy levels of proton-rich Cu56 have been extracted using in-beam γ-ray spectroscopy with the state-of-the-art γ-ray tracking array GRETINA in conjunction with the S800 spectrograph at the National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory at Michigan State University. Excited states in Cu56 serve as resonances in the Ni55(p,γ)Cu56 reaction, which is a part of the rp process in type-I x-ray bursts. To resolve existing ambiguities in the reaction Q value, a more localized isobaric multiplet mass equation (IMME) fit is used, resulting in Q=639±82 keV. We derive the first experimentally constrained thermonuclear reaction rate for Ni55(p,γ)Cu56. We find that, with this new rate, the rp process may bypass the Ni56 waiting point via the Ni55(p,γ) reaction for typical x-ray burst conditions with a branching of up to ∼40%. We also identify additional nuclear physics uncertainties that need to be addressed before drawing final conclusions about the rp-process reaction flow in the Ni56 region.
Physical Review C | 2016
Z. Meisel; S. George; S. Ahn; D. Bazin; B. A. Brown; J. Browne; J.F. Carpino; H. Chung; Richard H. Cyburt; A. Estrade; M. Famiano; A. Gade; C. Langer; M. Matos; W. Mittig; F. Montes; D. J. Morrissey; J. Pereira; H. Schatz; J. Schatz; M. Scott; D. Shapira; K. Sieja; K. Smith; J. Stevens; W. P. Tan; O. B. Tarasov; S. Towers; K. Wimmer; J. Winkelbauer
We present the mass excesses of 59-64Cr, obtained from recent time-of-flight nuclear mass measurements at the National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory at Michigan State University. The mass of 64Cr is determined for the first time, with an atomic mass excess of -33.48(44) MeV. We find a significantly different two-neutron separation energy S2n trend for neutron-rich isotopes of chromium, removing the previously observed enhancement in binding at N=38. Additionally, we extend the S2n trend for chromium to N=40, revealing behavior consistent with the previously identified island of inversion in this region. We compare our results to state-of-the-art shell-model calculations performed with a modified Lenzi-Nowacki-Poves-Sieja interaction in the fp shell, including the g9/2 and d5/2 orbits for the neutron valence space. We employ our result for the mass of 64Cr in accreted neutron star crust network calculations and find a reduction in the strength and depth of electron-capture heating from the A=64 isobaric chain, resulting in a cooler than expected accreted neutron star crust. This reduced heating is found to be due to the >1-MeV reduction in binding for 64Cr with respect to values from commonly used global mass models.
Physical Review C | 2014
L. A. Riley; M. L. Agiorgousis; T. Baugher; D. Bazin; M. Bowry; P. D. Cottle; F. G. DeVone; A. Gade; M. T. Glowacki; K. W. Kemper; E. Lunderberg; D. M. McPherson; S. Noji; F. Recchia; B. V. Sadler; M. Scott; D. Weisshaar; R. G. T. Zegers
A comparison of the present results with those from previous measurements of the lifetimes of the 2 + states provides us the ratio of the neutron and proton matrix elements for the 0 +.s. ! 2 + transitions. These results allow the determination of the ratio of the proton and neutron effective charges to be used in shell model calculations of neutron-rich isotopes in the vicinity of 48 Ca. Isotopes within a few nucleons of the doubly-magic nuclei provide the foundation for the nuclear shell model. The simplicity of the wavefunctions of the valence nucleons in these nuclei allows the determination of the two-body matrix elements necessary for predicting the energies of excited states and the effective charges used in calculating transition strengths in a given shell-model space. Effective charges reflect the strength of the coupling between the motion of the valence nucleons and the virtual excitations of the core nucleons.
Physical Review Letters | 2017
M. Scott; R. G. T. Zegers; R. Almus; Sam M. Austin; D. Bazin; B. A. Brown; C. M. Campbell; A. Gade; M. Bowry; S. Gales; U. Garg; Mohsen Harakeh; E. Kwan; C. Langer; C. Loelius; S. Lipschutz; E. Litvinova; E. Lunderberg; C. Morse; S. Noji; G. Perdikakis; T. Redpath; C. Robin; H. Sakai; Y. Sasamoto; M. Sasano; C. Sullivan; J. A. Tostevin; T. Uesaka; D. Weisshaar
The (^{10}Be,^{10}B^{*}[1.74 MeV]) charge-exchange reaction at 100 AMeV is presented as a new probe for isolating the isovector (ΔT=1) nonspin-transfer (ΔS=0) response of nuclei, with ^{28}Si being the first nucleus studied. By using a secondary ^{10}Be beam produced by fast fragmentation of ^{18}O nuclei at the NSCL Coupled Cyclotron Facility, applying the dispersion-matching technique with the S800 magnetic spectrometer to determine the excitation energy in ^{28}Al, and performing high-resolution γ-ray tracking with the Gamma-Ray Energy Tracking In-beam Nuclear Array (GRETINA) to identify the 1022-keV γ ray associated with the decay from the 1.74-MeV T=1 isobaric analog state in ^{10}B, a ΔS=0 excitation-energy spectrum in ^{28}Al was extracted. Monopole and dipole contributions were determined through a multipole-decomposition analysis, and the isovector giant dipole resonance and isovector giant monopole resonance (IVGMR) were identified. The results show that this probe is a powerful tool for studying the elusive IVGMR, which is of interest for performing stringent tests of modern density functional theories at high excitation energies and for constraining the bulk properties of nuclei and nuclear matter. The extracted distributions were compared with theoretical calculations based on the normal-modes formalism and the proton-neutron relativistic time-blocking approximation. Calculated cross sections based on these strengths underestimate the data by about a factor of 2, which likely indicates deficiencies in the reaction calculations based on the distorted wave Born approximation.
Physical Review C | 2016
L. A. Riley; D. M. McPherson; M. L. Agiorgousis; T. Baugher; D. Bazin; M. Bowry; P. D. Cottle; F. G. DeVone; A. Gade; M. T. Glowacki; S. D. Gregory; E. B. Haldeman; Kirby W. Kemper; E. Lunderberg; S. Noji; F. Recchia; B. V. Sadler; M. Scott; D. Weisshaar; R. G. T. Zegers
Low-lying excited states of the neutron-rich calcium isotopes
Proceedings of XIII Nuclei in the Cosmos — PoS(NIC XIII) | 2015
Z. Meisel; S. George; S. Ahn; J. Browne; D. Bazin; F. Carpino; H. Chung; A. Estrade; M. Famiano; A. Gade; C. Langer; M. Matoš; W. Mittig; F. Montes; D. J. Morrissey; J. Periera; H. Schatz; J. Schatz; M. Scott; D. Shapira; K. Smith; J. Stevens; W. P. Tan; O. B. Tarasov; S. Towers; K. Wimmer; J. Winkelbauer; J. Yurkon; R. G. T. Zegers
^{48-52}
International Symposium on Origin of Matter and Evolutions of Galaxies 2011, OMEG 2011 | 2012
M. Sasano; G. Perdikakis; R. G. T. Zegers; Sam M. Austin; D. Bazin; B. A. Brown; C. Caesar; A. L. Cole; J. M. Deaven; N. Ferrante; C. J. Guess; G. W. Hitt; H. Honma; R. Meharchand; F. Montes; J. Palardy; A. Prinke; L. A. Riley; H. Sakai; M. Scott; A. Stolz; Takeru K. Suzuki; L. Valdez; K. Yako
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Physical Review Letters | 2011
M. Sasano; G. Perdikakis; R. G. T. Zegers; Sam M. Austin; D. Bazin; B. A. Brown; C. Caesar; A. L. Cole; J. M. Deaven; N. Ferrante; C. J. Guess; G. W. Hitt; R. Meharchand; F. Montes; J. Palardy; A. Prinke; L. A. Riley; H. Sakai; M. Scott; A. Stolz; L. Valdez; K. Yako
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