Microscopic calculations of weak decays in superheavy nuclei
Pith reviewed 2026-05-24 20:53 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Microscopic calculations show alpha decay dominates over beta+ and electron capture in nuclei such as 290Fl and 293Mc.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Deformed self-consistent Skyrme Hartree-Fock mean-field calculations that include pairing correlations are used to obtain the nuclear structure of 290Fl, 293Mc, 294Lv, and 295Ts; the resulting beta+ and electron-capture half-lives are longer than the corresponding phenomenological alpha-decay half-lives, so that alpha decay is the dominant mode in this mass region.
What carries the argument
Deformed self-consistent Skyrme Hartree-Fock mean-field calculations with pairing correlations, which supply the single-particle energies, wave functions, and Q-values needed to evaluate the weak-decay rates.
If this is right
- Alpha decay sets the effective lifetime scale for these and neighboring superheavy species.
- The calculated weak-decay rates remain sensitive to the precise QEC values until those energies are measured.
- Deformation changes the overlap factors and therefore the weak-decay matrix elements.
- Phenomenological alpha formulas can be used with greater that they capture the leading decay channel.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The same microscopic framework could be applied to additional superheavy isotopes to locate where weak and alpha branches become comparable.
- Measured QEC values would allow a direct test of the Skyrme-Hartree-Fock wave functions against weak-decay data.
- If alpha dominance persists across the island of stability, synthesis experiments must optimize for rapid alpha chains rather than beta-delayed fission.
Load-bearing premise
The nuclear structure of these superheavy nuclei is accurately captured by deformed self-consistent Skyrme Hartree-Fock mean-field calculations that include pairing correlations.
What would settle it
An experimental QEC value or direct half-life measurement for any of the four nuclei that makes the beta+ or electron-capture rate faster than the phenomenological alpha rate.
Figures
read the original abstract
Half-lives of beta+ decay and electron capture are studied in some selected superheavy nuclei produced in hot fusion reactions, namely, 290Fl, 293Mc, 294Lv, and 295Ts. The nuclear structure is described microscopically from deformed self-consistent Skyrme Hartree-Fock mean-field calculations that include pairing correlations. The sensitivity of the half-lives to deformation and to the QEC energies, which are still not determined experimentally, are studied. The results are compared with phenomenological alpha-decay half-lives, showing that the latter decay mode is dominant in this mass region.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript computes beta+ and electron-capture half-lives for the superheavy nuclei 290Fl, 293Mc, 294Lv and 295Ts using deformed self-consistent Skyrme Hartree-Fock mean-field calculations that incorporate pairing correlations. It examines the dependence of these half-lives on nuclear deformation and on the still-undetermined QEC values, then compares the resulting weak-decay lifetimes with phenomenological alpha-decay half-lives to conclude that alpha decay dominates in this mass region.
Significance. If the microscopic results prove robust, the work supplies a parameter-consistent nuclear-structure input for weak-decay rates in the superheavy region, complementing the phenomenological alpha-decay systematics that currently guide experimental planning. The explicit treatment of deformation and QEC sensitivity is a constructive step toward reducing reliance on purely empirical extrapolations.
major comments (1)
- [Abstract] Abstract: the central claim that alpha decay is dominant requires an explicit demonstration that the microscopically computed beta+/EC half-lives remain longer than the phenomenological alpha values even at the lower edge of the plausible QEC range. Because the phase-space factor scales as (QEC)^5, a single nominal QEC value is insufficient to establish robustness; the manuscript must tabulate or plot the weak-decay lifetimes across the full experimental uncertainty interval of QEC.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the positive evaluation of the work and for the constructive suggestion to strengthen the robustness of the central claim. We address the major comment below.
read point-by-point responses
-
Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: the central claim that alpha decay is dominant requires an explicit demonstration that the microscopically computed beta+/EC half-lives remain longer than the phenomenological alpha values even at the lower edge of the plausible QEC range. Because the phase-space factor scales as (QEC)^5, a single nominal QEC value is insufficient to establish robustness; the manuscript must tabulate or plot the weak-decay lifetimes across the full experimental uncertainty interval of QEC.
Authors: We agree that an explicit demonstration across the full QEC uncertainty interval is required to establish robustness, given the strong phase-space dependence. Although the manuscript already studies the sensitivity of the half-lives to QEC, it does not provide a direct side-by-side comparison at the lower edge. In the revised manuscript we will add a table (or plot) that lists the computed beta+/EC half-lives at the lower, nominal, and upper edges of the plausible QEC range for each nucleus and compares them directly with the phenomenological alpha-decay half-lives, thereby confirming that alpha decay remains dominant throughout the interval. revision: yes
Circularity Check
No circularity; derivation uses external Skyrme parameters and independent phenomenological alpha lifetimes
full rationale
The paper computes beta+/EC half-lives from deformed Skyrme-HF mean-field wave functions (with standard external Skyrme forces and pairing) and compares them directly to separate phenomenological alpha-decay formulas. No equation defines a quantity in terms of itself, no fitted parameter is relabeled as a prediction, and no load-bearing step reduces to a self-citation chain. QEC values are treated as external experimental inputs whose uncertainty is explicitly propagated; the dominance conclusion is therefore a comparison between two independent classes of input rather than an internal redefinition. This is the normal non-circular case for a structure-plus-decay calculation paper.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Deformed self-consistent Skyrme Hartree-Fock mean-field calculations that include pairing correlations accurately describe the nuclear structure of the selected superheavy nuclei.
Reference graph
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