Compound-nucleus and doorway-state decays of
-delayed neutron emitters
K
崩壊遅発中性子核種
K
Xu, Z. Y.*; Grzywacz, R.*; Andreyev, A. N.; 他49名*
Xu, Z. Y.*; Grzywacz, R.*; Andreyev, A. N.; 49 of others*
We investigated decays of
K at the ISOLDE Decay Station at CERN in order to understand the mechanism of the
-delayed neutron-emission (
n) process. The experiment quantified neutron and
-ray emission paths for each precursor. We used this information to test the hypothesis, first formulated by Bohr in 1939, that neutrons in the
n process originate from the structureless "compound nucleus". The data are consistent with this postulate for most of the observed decay paths. The agreement, however, is surprising because the compound-nucleus stage should not be achieved in the studied
decay due to insufficient excitation energy and level densities in the neutron emitter. In the
K
n decay, we found a preferential population of the first excited state in
Ca that contradicted Bohr's hypothesis. The latter was interpreted as evidence for direct neutron emission sensitive to the structure of the neutron-unbound state. We propose that the observed nonstatistical neutron emission proceeds through the coupling with nearby doorway states that have large neutron-emission probabilities. The appearance of "compound-nucleus" decay is caused by the aggregated small contributions of multiple doorway states at higher excitation energy.