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Topic: Sg-265  (Read 15409 times)

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Offline gippgig

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Sg-265
« on: July 25, 2008, 03:01:31 AM »
A recent paper (Physical Review C 77 064320) analyses the reported properties of 265Sg. 2 different isomers of this nuclide were identified: 265Sga, which has a half-life of 9 s and mainly decays (8.85 MeV a) to 261Rfa (68 s a 8.28 MeV), & 265Sgb, with a 16 s half-life that mainly decays (8.69 MeV a) to 261Rfb (3 s  91% SF 9% a 8.51 MeV). 269Hs primarily decays to 265Sgb while the 248Cm(22Ne,5n) reaction produces both isomers. As with 261Rf, it is not clear which is the ground state. This paper also raises the same issue about 262Rf I previously mentioned (see "Transactinide decay chain misidentification" entry).

Offline Dan1195

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Re: Sg-265
« Reply #1 on: July 26, 2008, 08:59:15 PM »
I saw this on an online PPT presentation. The presence of isomers has complicated the efforts to correctly identify and confirm some decay chains, the 269Hs chain in particular. I had an earlier post which looked at the studies which identified 262Rf as having a 2 s half-life. Phys. Rev. Lett. 73, 624-627 (1994) and Phys. Rev. C 57, 1648-1655 (1998) based the ID of it from 266Sg alpha decay, which was very likely from 265Sg as it is now known that 266Sg decays by SF with a shorter lifetime. One other study claimed direct production, altough I personally only consider that a tentative assignment.

Offline gippgig

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Re: Sg-265
« Reply #2 on: July 26, 2008, 09:27:30 PM »
The current paper refers to a previous study (PRC 53 2893; I have not read this yet) that assigned a 2.1 s half-life to 262Rf on the basis of direct production in the 244Pu(22Ne,4n) reaction and states that "An analysis of the reported excitation function shows a much better agreement with the HIVAP prediction for the 244Pu(22Ne,5n)261Rf than for the 244Pu(22Ne,4n)262Rf reaction...".

Offline Dan1195

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Re: Sg-265
« Reply #3 on: July 27, 2008, 08:32:44 AM »
Prior to that study, Phys. Rev. C 31, 1801-1815 (1985) reported a 47 ms SF emitter and tentatively assigned it to 262Rf, but have not seen this verified with another study. Unfortunately observing this nuclide as a decay product is problematic, as 100+ decays of 266Sg would likely be needed to observed alpha radioactivity from this nuclide based on region systematics. 262Rf is also the EC daughter of 262Db, but then you have the issue of distinguishing the EC from the SF as far as lifetime measurements go.

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