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Featured researches published by T. N. Ginter.


Nature | 2007

Discovery of 40Mg and 42Al suggests neutron drip-line slant towards heavier isotopes.

T. Baumann; A. M. Amthor; D. Bazin; B. A. Brown; C. M. Folden; A. Gade; T. N. Ginter; M. Hausmann; M. Matos; D. J. Morrissey; M. Portillo; A. Schiller; B. M. Sherrill; A. Stolz; O. B. Tarasov; M. Thoennessen

A fundamental question in nuclear physics is what combinations of neutrons and protons can make up a nucleus. Many hundreds of exotic neutron-rich isotopes have never been observed; the limit of how many neutrons a given number of protons can bind is unknown for all but the lightest elements, owing to the delicate interplay between single particle and collective quantum effects in the nucleus. This limit, known as the neutron drip line, provides a benchmark for models of the atomic nucleus. Here we report a significant advance in the determination of this limit: the discovery of two new neutron-rich isotopes—40Mg and 42Al—that are predicted to be drip-line nuclei. In the past, several attempts to observe 40Mg were unsuccessful; moreover, the observation of 42Al provides an experimental indication that the neutron drip line may be located further towards heavier isotopes in this mass region than is currently believed. In stable nuclei, attractive pairing forces enhance the stability of isotopes with even numbers of protons and neutrons. In contrast, the present work shows that nuclei at the drip line gain stability from an unpaired proton, which narrows the shell gaps and provides the opportunity to bind many more neutrons.


Physical Review Letters | 2009

Evidence for a Change in the Nuclear Mass Surface with the Discovery of the Most Neutron-Rich Nuclei with 17 ≤Z ≤ 25

O. B. Tarasov; D. J. Morrissey; A. M. Amthor; T. Baumann; D. Bazin; A. Gade; T. N. Ginter; M. Hausmann; Naohito Inabe; Toshiyuki Kubo; A. Nettleton; J. Pereira; M. Portillo; B. M. Sherrill; A. Stolz; M. Thoennessen

The results of measurements of the production of neutron-rich nuclei by the fragmentation of a 76Ge beam are presented. The cross sections were measured for a large range of nuclei including 15 new isotopes that are the most neutron-rich nuclides of the elements chlorine to manganese (50Cl, 53Ar, ;{55,56}K, ;{57,58}Ca, ;{59,60,61}Sc, ;{62,63}Ti, ;{65,66}V, 68Cr, 70Mn). The enhanced cross sections of several new nuclei relative to a simple thermal evaporation framework, previously shown to describe similar production cross sections, indicates that nuclei in the region around 62Ti might be more stable than predicted by current mass models and could be an indication of a new island of inversion similar to that centered on 31Na.


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 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 | 2007

New isotope {sup 44}Si and systematics of the production cross sections of the most neutron-rich nuclei

O. B. Tarasov; T. Baumann; A. M. Amthor; D. Bazin; C. M. Folden; A. Gade; T. N. Ginter; M. Hausmann; M. Matos; D. J. Morrissey; A. Nettleton; M. Portillo; A. Schiller; B. M. Sherrill; A. Stolz; M. Thoennessen

The results of measurements of the production of neutron-rich nuclei by the fragmentation of a {sup 48}Ca beam at 142 MeV/nucleon are presented. Evidence was found for the production of a new isotope that is the most neutron-rich silicon nuclide, {sup 44}Si, in a net neutron pickup process. A simple systematic framework was found to describe the production cross sections based on thermal evaporation from excited prefragments that allows extrapolation to other weak reaction products.


Physical Review C | 2009

Production of very neutron-rich nuclei with a Ge 76 beam

O. B. Tarasov; M. Portillo; A. M. Amthor; T. Baumann; D. Bazin; A. Gade; T. N. Ginter; M. Hausmann; N. Inabe; T. Kubo; D. J. Morrissey; A. Nettleton; J. Pereira; B. M. Sherrill; A. Stolz; M. Thoennessen

Production cross sections for neutron-rich nuclei from the fragmentation of a


Physical Review C | 1998

Cold (neutronless)αternary fission of252Cf

A. V. Ramayya; J. H. Hamilton; J. K. Hwang; L. K. Peker; J. Kormicki; B. R. S. Babu; T. N. Ginter; A. Sandulescu; A. Florescu; Florin Carstoiu; W. Greiner; G. M. Ter-Akopian; Yu. Ts. Oganessian; A. V. Daniel; W. C. Ma; P. G. Varmette; J. O. Rasmussen; S. J. Asztalos; S. Y. Chu; Kenneth E. Gregorich; A. O. Macchiavelli; R. W. MacLeod; J. D. Cole; R. Aryaeinejad; K. Butler-Moore; M. W. Drigert; M. A. Stoyer; L. A. Bernstein; R. W. Lougheed; K. J. Moody

^{76}\mathrm{Ge}


Physical Review C | 2013

Production cross sections from 82Se fragmentation as indications of shell effects in neutron-rich isotopes close to the drip-line

O. B. Tarasov; M. Portillo; D. J. Morrissey; A. M. Amthor; L. Bandura; T. Baumann; D. Bazin; J. S. Berryman; B. A. Brown; G. Chubarian; N. Fukuda; A. Gade; T. N. Ginter; M. Hausmann; N. Inabe; T. Kubo; J. Pereira; B. M. Sherrill; A. Stolz; C. Sumithrarachichi; M. Thoennessen; D. Weisshaar

beam at 132 MeV/u were measured. The longitudinal momentum distributions of 34 neutron-rich isotopes of elements


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

13\ensuremath{\leqslant}Z\ensuremath{\leqslant}27


Physical Review C | 2001

Observation of a vh{sub 11/2} pair alignment in neutron-rich {sup 118}Pd

X. Q. Zhang; J. H. Hamilton; A. V. Ramayya; S. J. Zhu; J. K. Hwang; C. J. Beyer; J. Kormicki; E. F. Jones; P. M. Gore; B. R. S. Babu; T. N. Ginter; R. Aryaeinejad; K. Butler-Moore; J. D. Cole; M. W. Drigert; James Keith Jewell; Edward Lawrence Reber; J. Gilat; I. Y. Lee; J. O. Rasmussen; A. V. Daniel; Yu. Ts. Oganessian; G. M. Ter-Akopian; W. C. Ma; P. G. Varmette; L. A. Bernstein; R. W. Lougheed; K. J. Moody; M. A. Stoyer; R. Donangelo

were scanned using a novel experimental approach of varying the target thickness. Production cross sections with beryllium and tungsten targets were determined for a large number of nuclei, including 15 isotopes first observed in this work. These are the most neutron-rich nuclides of the elements

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A. Stolz

Michigan State University

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J. O. Rasmussen

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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T. Baumann

Michigan State University

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M. A. Stoyer

Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

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Kenneth E. Gregorich

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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A. O. Macchiavelli

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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