Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10725821 | Physics Letters B | 2009 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Electromagnetic transitions within nuclei reflect specific aspects of nuclear structure. This is particularly true for metastable excited states, or isomers, like 178Hfm2 (T1/2=31 years, excitation energy 2446 keV). The interaction of external radiation with isomers can be used to study atomic and nuclear properties and, perhaps, to induce a release of the stored energy. Some experiments indicated that low-energy photons near the L3 edge (9.561 keV) of hafnium could cause this to occur for 178Hfm2, but the lack of a viable physical model and null experiments by other groups have left these claims in doubt. The present work describes a new experiment to examine this process by closely duplicating the irradiation conditions in positive studies, but using a more advanced multi-detector γ array. No support for an induced depletion of 178Hfm2 by low-energy photons was obtained, with an upper limit for the integral cross section that is eight orders-of-magnitude below the reported value.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Physics and Astronomy
Nuclear and High Energy Physics
Authors
J.J. Carroll, S.A. Karamian, R. Propri, D. Gohlke, N. Caldwell, P. Ugorowski, T. Drummond, J. Lazich, H. Roberts, M. Helba, Z. Zhong, M.-T. Tang, J.-J. Lee, K. Liang,