Toward an experiment to constrain exotic halo properties from angular differential cross sections of neutron-breakup reactions

POSTER

Abstract

At FRIB, it is now possible to access a greater number of exotic halo nuclei. We plan to perform an experiment to study the neutron halo structure of 19C with a new technique. The technique proposes to determine the halo properties such as asymptotic normalization coefficients from angular differential cross sections of neutron breakup reactions [1]. Within the technique, the neutron decay energy of the halo nuclei needs to be constrained well by invariant mass spectroscopy. Our experiment therefore involves a complex detector set comprised of the MoNA neutron detector array, the Sweeper Magnet, and the BlueSTEAl Si array [2]. In this work, we have designed our experimental setup with these detectors, developed analysis protocols, and investigated the experiment’s feasibility by Geant4 simulation using the NPTool framework [3]. We simulated neutron breakup reactions from a 45 MeV/u 19C beam with realistic beam profiles and a 12C target. Each detector was modelled with realistic energy, position, and timing resolution. Configuration of the detector setup was optimized by evaluating the detection efficiency, resolution, background events, and statistics. We conclude that our knowledge of 19C halo properties can be drastically improved using the currently available detectors and beams at FRIB. These results will be included in our proposal for the FRIB PAC3.

*This work at Brookhaven National Laboratory was sponsored by the Office of Nuclear Physics, Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No.DE-AC02-98CH10886 with Brookhaven Science Associates, LLC. This project was supported in part by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Workforce Development for Teachers and Scientists (WDTS) under the Science Undergraduate Laboratory Internships Program (SULI). No export control.

Publication: [1] S. Ota et al., https://arxiv.org/abs/2407.15535 (submitted to PRL).
[2] S. Ota et al., NIMA 1059, 168946 (2024).
[3] https://nptool.in2p3.fr/

Presenters

  • Laura J Smith

    • Reed College

Authors

  • Laura J Smith

    • Reed College
  • Shuya Ota

    • Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL)
    • Brookhaven National Laboratory