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Dive into the research topics where M. Seidlitz is active.

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Featured researches published by M. Seidlitz.


Nature | 2013

Studies of pear-shaped nuclei using accelerated radioactive beams

L. P. Gaffney; P. A. Butler; M. Scheck; A. B. Hayes; F. Wenander; M. Albers; B. Bastin; C. Bauer; A. Blazhev; S. Bönig; N. Bree; Joakim Cederkäll; Timothy E. Chupp; D. Cline; T. E. Cocolios; Thomas Davinson; H. De Witte; J. Diriken; T. Grahn; Andrej Herzan; M. Huyse; D. G. Jenkins; D. T. Joss; N. Kesteloot; J. Konki; M. Kowalczyk; Th. Kröll; E. Kwan; R. Lutter; K. Moschner

There is strong circumstantial evidence that certain heavy, unstable atomic nuclei are ‘octupole deformed’, that is, distorted into a pear shape. This contrasts with the more prevalent rugby-ball shape of nuclei with reflection-symmetric, quadrupole deformations. The elusive octupole deformed nuclei are of importance for nuclear structure theory, and also in searches for physics beyond the standard model; any measurable electric-dipole moment (a signature of the latter) is expected to be amplified in such nuclei. Here we determine electric octupole transition strengths (a direct measure of octupole correlations) for short-lived isotopes of radon and radium. Coulomb excitation experiments were performed using accelerated beams of heavy, radioactive ions. Our data on 220Rn and 224Ra show clear evidence for stronger octupole deformation in the latter. The results enable discrimination between differing theoretical approaches to octupole correlations, and help to constrain suitable candidates for experimental studies of atomic electric-dipole moments that might reveal extensions to the standard model.


Physical Review Letters | 2016

Spectroscopic Quadrupole Moments in {96,98}Sr: Evidence for Shape Coexistence in Neutron-Rich Strontium Isotopes at N=60.

E. Clément; M. Zielinska; A. Görgen; W. Korten; S. Péru; J Libert; H Goutte; S Hilaire; B. Bastin; C. Bauer; A. Blazhev; N. Bree; B. Bruyneel; P. A. Butler; J. Butterworth; P. Delahaye; A Dijon; D T Doherty; A. Ekström; C. Fitzpatrick; C. Fransen; G. Georgiev; R. Gernhäuser; H. Hess; J. Iwanicki; D. G. Jenkins; A. C. Larsen; J Ljungvall; R. Lutter; P. Marley

Neutron-rich {96,98}Sr isotopes have been investigated by safe Coulomb excitation of radioactive beams at the REX-ISOLDE facility. Reduced transition probabilities and spectroscopic quadrupole moments have been extracted from the differential Coulomb excitation cross sections. These results allow, for the first time, the drawing of definite conclusions about the shape coexistence of highly deformed prolate and spherical configurations. In particular, a very small mixing between the coexisting states is observed, contrary to other mass regions where strong mixing is present. Experimental results have been compared to beyond-mean-field calculations using the Gogny D1S interaction in a five-dimensional collective Hamiltonian formalism, which reproduce the shape change at N=60.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

Anomalies in the Charge Yields of Fission Fragments from the U(n,f)238 Reaction

J.N. Wilson; M. Lebois; L. Qi; P Amador-Celdran; D. L. Bleuel; J. A. Briz; Raymond J. Carroll; W. N. Catford; H. De Witte; D. T. Doherty; R. Eloirdi; G. Georgiev; A. Gottardo; A. Goasduff; K. Hadynska-Klek; K. Hauschild; H. Hess; V. W. Ingeberg; T. Konstantinopoulos; J. Ljungvall; A. Lopez-Martens; G. Lorusso; R. Lozeva; R. Lutter; P. Marini; I. Matea; T. Materna; L. Mathieu; Andreas Oberstedt; S. Oberstedt

Fast-neutron-induced fission of ^{238}U at an energy just above the fission threshold is studied with a novel technique which involves the coupling of a high-efficiency γ-ray spectrometer (MINIBALL) to an inverse-kinematics neutron source (LICORNE) to extract charge yields of fission fragments via γ-γ coincidence spectroscopy. Experimental data and fission models are compared and found to be in reasonable agreement for many nuclei; however, significant discrepancies of up to 600% are observed, particularly for isotopes of Sn and Mo. This indicates that these models significantly overestimate the standard 1 fission mode and suggests that spherical shell effects in the nascent fission fragments are less important for low-energy fast-neutron-induced fission than for thermal neutron-induced fission. This has consequences for understanding and modeling the fission process, for experimental nuclear structure studies of the most neutron-rich nuclei, for future energy applications (e.g., Generation IV reactors which use fast-neutron spectra), and for the reactor antineutrino anomaly.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Rb379760: The Cornerstone of the Region of Deformation around A∼100

C. Sotty; M. Zielinska; G. Georgiev; D. L. Balabanski; A.E. Stuchbery; A. Blazhev; N. Bree; R. Chevrier; S. Das Gupta; J. M. Daugas; T. Davinson; H. De Witte; J. Diriken; L. P. Gaffney; K. Geibel; K. Hadyńska-Klȩk; F. G. Kondev; J. Konki; T. Kröll; Philippe Morel; P. Napiorkowski; J. Pakarinen; P. Reiter; M. Scheck; M. Seidlitz; B. Siebeck; G. Simpson; H. Törnqvist; N. Warr; F. Wenander

Excited states of the neutron-rich nuclei (97,99)Rb were populated for the first time using the multistep Coulomb excitation of radioactive beams. Comparisons of the results with particle-rotor model calculations provide clear identification for the ground-state rotational band of (97)Rb as being built on the πg(9/2) [431] 3/2(+) Nilsson-model configuration. The ground-state excitation spectra of the Rb isotopes show a marked distinction between single-particle-like structures below N=60 and rotational bands above. The present study defines the limits of the deformed region around A∼100 and indicates that the deformation of (97)Rb is essentially the same as that observed well inside the deformed region. It further highlights the power of the Coulomb-excitation technique for obtaining spectroscopic information far from stability. The (99)Rb case demonstrates the challenges of studies with very short-lived postaccelerated radioactive beams.


Physical Review C | 2015

Collectivity in the light radon nuclei measured directly via Coulomb excitation

L. P. Gaffney; A. P. Robinson; D. G. Jenkins; A. N. Andreyev; Michaël Bender; A. Blazhev; N. Bree; B. Bruyneel; P. A. Butler; T. E. Cocolios; Thomas Davinson; A. N. Deacon; H. De Witte; Douglas DiJulio; J. Diriken; A. Ekström; C. Fransen; S. J. Freeman; K. Geibel; T. Grahn; B. Hadinia; M. Hass; Paul-Henri Heenen; H. Hess; M. Huyse; U. Jakobsson; N. Kesteloot; J. Konki; Th. Kroell; V. Kumar

Background: Shape coexistence in heavy nuclei poses a strong challenge to state-of-the-art nuclear models, where several competing shape minima are found close to the ground state. A classic region for investigating this phenomenon is in the region around Z = 82 and the neutron midshell at N = 104. Purpose: Evidence for shape coexistence has been inferred from a-decay measurements, laser spectroscopy, and in-beam measurements. While the latter allow the pattern of excited states and rotational band structures to be mapped out, a detailed understanding of shape coexistence can only come from measurements of electromagnetic matrix elements. Method: Secondary, radioactive ion beams of Rn-202 and Rn-204 were studied by means of low-energy Coulomb excitation at the REX-ISOLDE in CERN. Results: The electric-quadrupole (E2) matrix element connecting the ground state and first excited 2(1)(+) state was extracted for both Rn-202 and Rn-204, corresponding to B(E2; 2(1)(+) -> 0(1)(+)) = 29(-8)(+8) and 43(-12)(+17) W.u., respectively. Additionally, E2 matrix elements connecting the 2(1)(+) state with the 4(1)(+) and 2(2)(+) states were determined in Rn-202. No excited 0(+) states were observed in the current data set, possibly owing to a limited population of second-order processes at the currently available beam energies. Conclusions: The results are discussed in terms of collectivity and the deformation of both nuclei studied is deduced to be weak, as expected from the low-lying level-energy schemes. Comparisons are also made to state-of-the-art beyond-mean-field model calculations and the magnitude of the transitional quadrupole moments are well reproduced. (Less)


Physical Review C | 2016

Spectroscopy of Ar-46 by the (t, p) two-neutron transfer reaction

K. Nowak; K. Wimmer; S. Hellgartner; D. Mücher; V. Bildstein; J. Diriken; J. Elseviers; L. P. Gaffney; R. Gernhäuser; J. Iwanicki; J. G. Johansen; M. Huyse; J. Konki; T. Kröll; R. Krücken; R. Lutter; R. Orlandi; J. Pakarinen; R. Raabe; P. Reiter; T. Roger; G. Schrieder; M. Seidlitz; O. Sorlin; P. Van Duppen; N. Warr; H. De Witte; M. Zielinska

States in the N = 28 nucleus Ar-46 have been studied by a two-neutron transfer reaction at REX-ISOLDE (CERN). A beam of radioactive Ar-44 at an energy of 2.16 AMeV and a tritium-loaded titanium target were used to populate Ar-46 by the H-3(Ar-44, p) two-neutron transfer reaction. Protons emitted from the target were identified in the T-REX silicon detector array. The excitation energies of states in Ar-46 have been reconstructed from the measured angles and energies of recoil protons. Angular distributions for three final states were measured and based on the shape of the differential cross section an excited state at 3695 keV was identified as J(pi) = 0(+). The angular differential cross section for the population of different states are compared to calculations using a reaction model employing both sequential and direct transfer of two neutrons. Results are compared to shell-model calculations using state-of-the-art effective interactions.


European Physical Journal A | 2015

Low-energy Coulomb excitation of

L. P. Gaffney; J. Van de Walle; B. Bastin; V. Bildstein; A. Blazhev; N. Bree; Joakim Cederkäll; I. J. Darby; H. De Witte; Douglas DiJulio; J. Diriken; V. N. Fedosseev; C. Fransen; R. Gernhäuser; A. Gustafsson; H. Hess; M. Huyse; N. Kesteloot; T. Kröll; R. Lutter; B. A. Marsh; P. Reiter; M. Seidlitz; P. Van Duppen; D. Voulot; N. Warr; F. Wenander; K. Wimmer; K. Wrzosek-Lipska

Sub-barrier Coulomb excitation was performed on a mixed beam of 62Mn and 62Fe, following in-trap β− decay of 62Mn at REX-ISOLDE, CERN. The trapping and charge breeding times were varied in order to alter the composition of the beam, which was measured by means of an ionisation chamber at the zero-angle position of the Miniball array. A new transition was observed at 418 keV, which has been tentatively associated to a (2+,3+)→ 1g.s.+ transition. This fixes the relative positions of the β-decaying 4+ and 1+ states in 62Mn for the first time. Population of the 21+ state was observed in 62Fe and the cross-section determined by normalisation to the 109Ag target excitation, confirming the B(E2) value measured in recoil-distance lifetime experiments.


Journal of Physics: Conference Series | 2018

^{62}

K. Arnswald; P. Reiter; L. Coraggio; B. Birkenbach; A. Blazhev; T. Braunroth; A. Dewald; C. Fransen; B. Fu; A. Gargano; H. Hess; R. Hirsch; N. Itaco; S. M. Lenzi; L. Lewandowski; J. Litzinger; C. Müller-Gatermann; M. Queiser; D. Rosiak; D. Schneiders; M. Seidlitz; B. Siebeck; T. Steinbach; A. Vogt; K. Wolf; Karl Oskar Zell

Lifetimes of the states in 44Ti, 48,50Cr, and 52Fe were determined with high accuracy exploiting the recoil distance Doppler-shift method. The reduced E2 transition strengths of 44Ti and 52 Fe differ considerably from previously known values. A systematic increase in collectivity is found for the N = Z nuclei compared to neighboring isotopes. The B(E2) values along the Ti, Cr, and Fe isotopic chains are compared to shell-model calculations employing established interactions for the 0f 1p shell, as well as a novel effective shell-model Hamiltonian starting from a realistic nucleon-nucleon potential. The theoretical approaches underestimate the B(E2) values for the lower-mass Ti isotopes. Strong indication is found for particle-hole cross-shell configurations, recently corroborated by similar results for the neighboring isotone 42 Ca. A detailed manuscript has meanwhile been published in Physics Letters B [1].


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Fe and

C. Sotty; M. Zielinska; G. Georgiev; D. L. Balabanski; A.E. Stuchbery; A. Blazhev; N. Bree; R. Chevrier; S. Das Gupta; J. M. Daugas; T. Davinson; H. De Witte; J. Diriken; L. P. Gaffney; K. Geibel; K. Hadyńska-klęk; F. G. Kondev; J. Konki; T. Kroell; Philippe Morel; P. Napiorkowski; J. Pakarinen; P. Reiter; M. Scheck; M. Seidlitz; B. Siebeck; G. Simpson; H. Toernqvist; N. Warr; F. Wenander

Excited states of the neutron-rich nuclei (97,99)Rb were populated for the first time using the multistep Coulomb excitation of radioactive beams. Comparisons of the results with particle-rotor model calculations provide clear identification for the ground-state rotational band of (97)Rb as being built on the πg(9/2) [431] 3/2(+) Nilsson-model configuration. The ground-state excitation spectra of the Rb isotopes show a marked distinction between single-particle-like structures below N=60 and rotational bands above. The present study defines the limits of the deformed region around A∼100 and indicates that the deformation of (97)Rb is essentially the same as that observed well inside the deformed region. It further highlights the power of the Coulomb-excitation technique for obtaining spectroscopic information far from stability. The (99)Rb case demonstrates the challenges of studies with very short-lived postaccelerated radioactive beams.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

^{62}

C. Sotty; M. Zielinska; G. Georgiev; D. L. Balabanski; A.E. Stuchbery; A. Blazhev; N. Bree; R. Chevrier; S. Das Gupta; J. M. Daugas; Thomas Davinson; H. De Witte; J. Diriken; L. P. Gaffney; K. Geibel; K. Hadyńska-klęk; F. G. Kondev; J. Konki; T. Kröll; Philippe Morel; P. Napiorkowski; J. Pakarinen; P. Reiter; M. Scheck; M. Seidlitz; B. Siebeck; G. Simpson; H. Törnqvist; N. Warr; F. Wenander

Excited states of the neutron-rich nuclei (97,99)Rb were populated for the first time using the multistep Coulomb excitation of radioactive beams. Comparisons of the results with particle-rotor model calculations provide clear identification for the ground-state rotational band of (97)Rb as being built on the πg(9/2) [431] 3/2(+) Nilsson-model configuration. The ground-state excitation spectra of the Rb isotopes show a marked distinction between single-particle-like structures below N=60 and rotational bands above. The present study defines the limits of the deformed region around A∼100 and indicates that the deformation of (97)Rb is essentially the same as that observed well inside the deformed region. It further highlights the power of the Coulomb-excitation technique for obtaining spectroscopic information far from stability. The (99)Rb case demonstrates the challenges of studies with very short-lived postaccelerated radioactive beams.

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H. De Witte

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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H. Hess

University of Cologne

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N. Warr

University of Cologne

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M. Huyse

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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N. Bree

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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