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P. Delahaye

Bio: P. Delahaye is an academic researcher from Centre national de la recherche scientifique. The author has contributed to research in topics: Penning trap & ISOLTRAP. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 158 publications receiving 2282 citations. Previous affiliations of P. Delahaye include University of Mainz & University of Caen Lower Normandy.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
N. Warr1, J. Van de Walle2, J. Van de Walle3, M. Albers1, F. Ames4, B. Bastin, C. Bauer5, V. Bildstein6, A. Blazhev1, S. Bönig5, N. Bree, B. Bruyneel1, P. A. Butler7, Joakim Cederkäll8, Joakim Cederkäll3, E. Clément3, Thomas Elias Cocolios3, Thomas Davinson9, H. De Witte, P. Delahaye3, Douglas D. DiJulio8, Jan Diriken, J. Eberth1, Andreas Ekström8, J. Elseviers, S. Emhofer4, D. V. Fedorov10, V. N. Fedosseev3, S. Franchoo3, C. Fransen1, Liam Gaffney7, J. Gerl, Georgi P. Georgiev11, R. Gernhäuser6, T. Grahn7, T. Grahn12, T. Grahn13, D. Habs4, H. Hess1, A. M. Hurst7, Mark Huyse, O. Ivanov, J. Iwanicki14, J. Iwanicki7, D. G. Jenkins7, D. G. Jenkins15, J. Jolie1, N. Kesteloot, Oliver Kester4, U. Köster3, M. Krauth, Th. Kröll5, Th. Kröll6, R. Krücken6, M. Lauer, J. Leske5, K. P. Lieb16, R. Lutter4, L. Maier6, B. A. Marsh3, D. Mücher6, D. Mücher1, M. Münch6, O. Niedermaier, Janne Pakarinen, M. Pantea5, Gheorghe Pascovici1, N. Patronis, D. Pauwels, A. Petts7, Norbert Pietralla5, Riccardo Raabe, E. Rapisarda3, P. Reiter1, Achim Richter5, O. Schaile4, Marcus Scheck7, Marcus Scheck5, Heiko Scheit5, G. Schrieder5, D. Schwalm, M. Seidlitz1, M. D. Seliverstov, T. Sieber3, Herbert A. Simon5, K.-H. Speidel17, C. Stahl5, I. Stefanescu18, P. G. Thirolf4, H.G. Thomas1, M. Thürauf5, P. Van Duppen, D. Voulot3, R. Wadsworth15, G. Walter, D. Weißhaar1, Fredrik Wenander3, Andreas Wiens1, Kathrin Wimmer6, B. H. Wolf4, Philip Woods9, K. Wrzosek-Lipska14, K. O. Zell1 
TL;DR: The Miniball germanium detector array has been operational at the REX (Radioactive ion beam EXperiment) post accelerator at the Isotope Separator On-Line facility ISOLDE at CERN since 2001.
Abstract: The Miniball germanium detector array has been operational at the REX (Radioactive ion beam EXperiment) post accelerator at the Isotope Separator On-Line facility ISOLDE at CERN since 2001. During the last decade, a series of successful Coulomb excitation and transfer reaction studies have been performed with this array, utilizing the unique and high-quality radioactive ion beams which are available at ISOLDE. In this article, an overview is given of the technical details of the full Miniball setup, including a description of the \(\gamma\)-ray and particle detectors, beam monitoring devices and methods to deal with beam contamination. The specific timing properties of the REX-ISOLDE facility are highlighted to indicate the sensitivity that can be achieved with the full Miniball setup. The article is finalized with a summary of some physics highlights at REX-ISOLDE and the utilization of the Miniball germanium detectors at other facilities.

128 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The on-line application of atomic laser ionization spectroscopy in a supersonic gas jet is demonstrated, a technique suited for high-precision studies of the ground- and isomeric-state properties of nuclei located at the extremes of stability.
Abstract: Resonant laser ionization and spectroscopy are widely used techniques at radioactive ion beam facilities to produce pure beams of exotic nuclei and measure the shape, size, spin and electromagnetic multipole moments of these nuclei. However, in such measurements it is difficult to combine a high efficiency with a high spectral resolution. Here we demonstrate the on-line application of atomic laser ionization spectroscopy in a supersonic gas jet, a technique suited for high-precision studies of the ground- and isomeric-state properties of nuclei located at the extremes of stability. The technique is characterized in a measurement on actinium isotopes around the N=126 neutron shell closure. A significant improvement in the spectral resolution by more than one order of magnitude is achieved in these experiments without loss in efficiency.

89 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A gas-filled segmented linear Paul trap has been installed at the focal plane of the high-resolution separator (HRS) at CERN-ISOLDE, which is able to accumulate the ions and release the sample in bunches with a well-defined time structure.
Abstract: A gas-filled segmented linear Paul trap has been installed at the focal plane of the high-resolution separator (HRS) at CERN-ISOLDE. As well as providing beams with a reduced transverse emittance, this device is also able to accumulate the ions and release the sample in bunches with a well-defined time structure. This has recently permitted collinear laser spectroscopy with stable and radioactive bunched beams to be demonstrated at ISOLDE. Surface-ionized 39, 44, 46K and 85Rb beams were accelerated to 30keV, mass separated and injected into the trap for subsequent extraction and delivery to the laser setup. The ions were neutralized in a charge exchange cell and excited with a co-propagating laser. The small ion beam emittance allowed focussing in the ion-laser overlap region, which is essential to achieve the best experimental sensitivity. Fluorescent photons were detected by a photomultiplier tube as a frequency scan was taken. A gate (typically 7-12μs wide) was set on the photomultiplier signal to accept the fluorescent photons within the time window defined by the bunch. Thus, using accumulation times of 100ms, the dominant contribution to background due to continuous laser scattering could be reduced by a factor of up to 4×104 .

80 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Using resonant laser ionization, beta-decay studies, and for the first time mass measurements, three betadecaying states have been unambiguously identified in 70Cu as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: Using resonant laser ionization, beta-decay studies, and for the first time mass measurements, three beta-decaying states have been unambiguously identified in 70Cu. A mass excess of -62 976.1(1.6) keV and a half-life of 44.5(2) s for the (6-) ground state have been determined. The level energies of the (3-) isomer at 101.1(3) keV with T(1/2)=33(2) s and the 1+ isomer at 242.4(3) keV with T(1/2)=6.6(2) s are confirmed by high-precision mass measurements. The low-lying levels of 70Cu populated in the decay of 70Ni and in transfer reactions compare well with large-scale shell-model calculations, and the wave functions appear to be dominated by one proton-one neutron configurations outside the closed Z=28 shell and N=40 subshell. This does not apply to the 1+ state at 1980 keV which exhibits a particular feeding and deexcitation pattern not reproduced by the shell-model calculations.

74 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The decay energy of the superallowed beta decay 74Rb(beta+)74Kr was determined by direct Penning trap mass measurements on both the mother and the daughter nuclide using the time-of-flight resonance technique and was found to be Q=10 416.8(4.5) keV.
Abstract: The decay energy of the superallowed $\ensuremath{\beta}$ decay $^{74}\mathrm{R}\mathrm{b}({\ensuremath{\beta}}^{+})^{74}\mathrm{K}\mathrm{r}$ was determined by direct Penning trap mass measurements on both the mother and the daughter nuclide using the time-of-flight resonance technique and was found to be $Q=10\text{ }416.8(4.5)\text{ }\mathrm{k}\mathrm{e}\mathrm{V}$. The exotic nuclide $^{74}\mathrm{R}\mathrm{b}$, with a half-life of only 65 ms, is the shortest-lived nuclide on which a high-precision mass measurement in a Penning trap has been carried out. Together with existing data for the partial half-life as well as theoretical corrections, the decay energy yields a comparative half-life of $Ft=3084(15)\text{ }\mathrm{s}$ for this decay, in agreement with the mean value for the series of the lighter nuclides from $^{10}\mathrm{C}$ to $^{54}\mathrm{C}\mathrm{o}$. Assuming conserved vector current, this result allows for an experimental determination of the isospin-symmetry-breaking correction ${\ensuremath{\delta}}_{\mathrm{C}}$.

68 citations


Cited by
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01 Apr 2001
TL;DR: In this paper, the reduced electric quadrupole transition probability, B(E2)↑, from the ground state to the first-excited 2+ state of even-even nuclides are given in Table I.
Abstract: Adopted values for the reduced electric quadrupole transition probability, B(E2)↑, from the ground state to the first-excited 2+ state of even–even nuclides are given in Table I. Values of τ, the mean life of the 2+ state; E, the energy; and β, the quadrupole deformation parameter, are also listed there. The ratio of β to the value expected from the single-particle model is presented. The intrinsic quadrupole moment, Q0, is deduced from the B(E2)↑ value. The product E×B(E2)↑ is expressed as a percentage of the energy-weighted total and isoscalar E2 sum-rule strengths. Table II presents the data on which Table I is based, namely the experimental results for B(E2)↑ values with quoted uncertainties. Information is also given on the quantity measured and the method used. The literature has been covered to November 2000. The adopted B(E2)↑ values are compared in Table III with the values given by systematics and by various theoretical models. Predictions of unmeasured B(E2)↑ values are also given in Table III.

955 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Klaus Blaum1
TL;DR: The mass of an atom, and its inherent connection with the atomic and nuclear binding energy is a fundamental property, a unique fingerprint of the atomic nucleus as mentioned in this paper, and the importance of its mass ranges from verification of nuclear models to a test of the Standard Model, in particular with regard to the weak interaction and the unitarity of the Cabibbo-Kobayashi-Maskawa quark mixing matrix.

578 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The theoretical status of coexistence in nuclei is summarized in this article, where microscopic shell-model descriptions and mean-field descriptions are emphasized, and a systematic data for both even and odd-mass nuclei, selected to illustrate the various ways in which coexistence is observed in nucleis.
Abstract: Shape coexistence in nuclei appears to be unique in the realm of finite many-body quantum systems It differs from the various geometrical arrangements that sometimes occur in a molecule in that in a molecule the various arrangements are of the widely separated atomic nuclei In nuclei the various ''arrangements'' of nucleons involve (sets of) energy eigenstates with different electric quadrupole properties such as moments and transition rates, and different distributions of proton pairs and neutron pairs with respect to their Fermi energies Sometimes two such structures will ''invert'' as a function of the nucleon number, resulting in a sudden and dramatic change in ground-state properties in neighboring isotopes and isotones In the first part of this review the theoretical status of coexistence in nuclei is summarized Two approaches, namely, microscopic shell-model descriptions and mean-field descriptions, are emphasized The second part of this review presents systematic data, for both even- and odd-mass nuclei, selected to illustrate the various ways in which coexistence is observed in nuclei The last part of this review looks to future developments and the issue of the universality of coexistence in nuclei Surprises continue to be discovered With the major advances in reaching to extremes of proton-neutronmore » number, and the anticipated new ''rare isotope beam'' facilities, guidelines for search and discovery are discussed« less

570 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The mass of the nucleus has been of capital importance not only for various aspects of nuclear physics, but also for other branches of physics, notably weak-interaction studies and astrophysics as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: The mass of the nucleus, through its binding energy, continues to be of capital importance not only for various aspects of nuclear physics, but also for other branches of physics, notably weak-interaction studies and astrophysics. The authors first describe the modern experimental techniques dedicated to the particularly challenging task of measuring the mass of exotic nuclides and make detailed comparisons. Though tremendous progress in these and the associated production techniques has been made, allowing access to nuclides very far from stability, it is still not yet possible to produce many nuclides involved in stellar nucleosynthesis, especially the $r$ process, leaving no choice but to resort to theory. The review thus goes on to describe and critically compare the various modern mass formulas that may be used to extrapolate from the data towards the neutron drip line. Special attention is devoted to the crucial interplay between theory and experiment, showing how new measurements far from stability can considerably reduce the ambiguity in extrapolations to nuclides even further away.

555 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the structural evolution along the isotonic and isotopic chains around the “traditional” magic numbers 8, 20, 28, 50, 82 and 126 is discussed using complementary experimental information, such as the binding energies of the orbits bounding the shell gaps.

466 citations