Probing <sup>11</sup>Be Structure with Transfer Reactions in the AT-TPC

ORAL

Abstract

The commissioning of transfer reaction measurements in inverse kinematics in the SOLARIS solenoid with the Active Target Time Projection Chamber (AT-TPC) was successfully completed in the summer of 2021 at the former NSCL. The goal of this experiment was to demonstrate the possibility of performing transfer reaction measurements at low beam intensities (between 100 Hz - 1 kHz) using the high luminosity provided by the AT-TPC. A beam of 10Be was accelerated to 9 MeV/u in the ReA6 linac and delivered to the AT-TPC placed inside SOLARIS, which provided a 3 Tesla magnetic field. The AT-TPC was filled with pure deuterium gas at 600 Torr. Although multiple reaction channels were simultaneously detected, we focus on the 10Be(d,p) channel that populates bound and unbound states in 11Be with a particular interest towards the 3.4 MeV resonance for which the parity is still an open question. We present the preliminary analysis of the 10Be(d,p) channel, including angular momentum transfer identification and determination of spectroscopic factors from comparison with DWBA calculations. With the success of this experiment, the AT-TPC has since collected data on multiple transfer reactions, including those derived from 16C+d, 16C+p, 15C+d, 15C+p, 12Be+p, and 7Be+d at around 12 MeV/u; their analyses are currently in progress.

*This work is supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Nuclear Physics under Grant DE-SC0020451.

Presenters

  • Michael Serikow

    • Michigan State University

Authors

  • Michael Serikow

    • Michigan State University
  • Daniel Bazin

    • Michigan State University
  • Jie Chen

    • Southern University of Science and Technology
  • Nabin Rijal

    • Michigan State University
  • Wolfgang Mittig

    • National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory, MSU
  • Saul Beceiro-Novo

    • Michigan State University
  • Yassid Ayyad

    • Universidade de Santiago de Compostela
    • Universidad de Santiago de Compostela
  • Clementine Angelique Santamaria

    • Michigan State University & Morgan State University
  • Nicholas Keeley

    • National Centre for Nuclear Research