pith. sign in

arxiv: nucl-th/0011044 · v1 · pith:FEF7JVGQnew · submitted 2000-11-12 · ⚛️ nucl-th

The Original Mixed Symmetry States - 6⁺₁ and 6⁺₂ in ⁴⁸Ti

classification ⚛️ nucl-th
keywords matrixsignaturestatestateselementgamow-tellerevenexperiment
0
0 comments X
read the original abstract

The $6^{+}_{1}$ and $6^{+}_{2}$ in $^{48}$Ti form a nearly degenerate doublet. In a single j shell calculation with the matrix elements from experiment the $6^{+}_{1}$ changes sign under the interchange of protons and neutron holes (odd signature) while the $6_{2}^{+}$ does not (even signature). As a consequence the calculated B(E2) $6_{1}^{+}\to 4_{1}^{+}$ is much stronger than the $6_{2}^{+}\to 4_{1}^{+}$ and the Gamow-Teller matrix element to the $6_{2}^{+}$ state vanishes. When using some popular interaction e.g. FPD6 in single j shell the ordering of the even signature and odd signature states gets reversed, so that the Gamow-Teller matrix element to the $6^{+}_{1}$ state vanishes and the $6_{2}^{+}\to 4_{1}^{+}$ E2 transition is the strong one. When configuration mixing is introduced, the E2 transition $6_{2}^{+}\to 4_{1}^{+}$ persists in being large. However the Gamow-Teller strengths reverse, with the large matrix element to the $6_{1}^{+}$ state in agreement with experiment. Static properties $\mu$ and Q for the two $6^{+}$ states are also considered. The experimental B(E2)'s from the $6^{+}$ states to the $4_{1}^{+}$ state are not well known.

This paper has not been read by Pith yet.

discussion (0)

Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.