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First high-precision direct determination of the atomic mass of a superheavy nuclide

Published 4 Jun 2020 in nucl-ex | (2006.02605v3)

Abstract: We present the first direct measurement of the atomic mass of a superheavy nuclide. Atoms of ${257}$Db ($Z$=105) were produced online at the RIKEN Nishina Center for Accelerator-Based Science using the fusion-evaporation reaction ${208}$Pb(${51}$V, 2n)${257}$Db. The gas-filled recoil ion separator GARIS-II was used to suppress both the unreacted primary beam and some transfer products, prior to delivering the energetic beam of ${257}$Db ions to a helium gas-filled ion stopping cell wherein they were thermalized. Thermalized ${257}$Db${3+}$ ions were then transferred to a multi-reflection time-of-flight mass spectrograph for mass analysis. An alpha particle detector embedded in the ion time-of-flight detector allowed disambiguation of the rare ${257}$Db${3+}$ time-of-flight detection events from background by means of correlation with characteristic $\alpha$-decays. The extreme sensitivity of this technique allowed a precision atomic mass determination from 11 events. The mass excess was determined to be $100\,063(231)\textrm{stat}(132)\textrm{sys}$~keV/c$2$. Comparing to several mass models, we show the technique can be used to unambiguously determine the atomic number as $Z$=105 and should allow similar evaluations for heavier species in future work.

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