In an experiment at the SISSI/LISE3 facility of GANIL, we have studied the decay of the two proton-rich nuclei 45 Fe and 48 Ni. We identified 30 implantations of 45 Fe and observed for the second time four implantation events of 48 Ni. In 17 cases, 45 Fe decays by two-proton emission with a decay energy of 1.154(16) MeV and a half-life of T 1/2 = 1.6 +0.5 −0.3 ms. The observation of 48 Ni and of its decay allows us to deduce a half-life of T 1/2 = 2.1 +2.1 −0.7 ms. One out of four decay events is completely compatible with two-proton radioactivity and may therefore indicate that 48 Ni has a two-proton radioactivity branch. We discuss all information now available on two-proton radioactivity for 45 Fe and 48 Ni and compare it to theoretical models.
The p((11)Li, (9)Li)t reaction has been studied for the first time at an incident energy of 3A MeV at the new ISAC-2 facility at TRIUMF. An active target detector MAYA, built at GANIL, was used for the measurement. The differential cross sections have been determined for transitions to the (9)Li ground and first excited states in a wide range of scattering angles. Multistep transfer calculations using different (11)Li model wave functions show that wave functions with strong correlations between the halo neutrons are the most successful in reproducing the observation.
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