18–22 May 2026
Helga Engs Hus
Europe/Oslo timezone

Investigating the Giant Dipole Resonance of $^{164}$Dy using Nuclear Resonance Fluorescence

20 May 2026, 15:20
20m
Auditorium 1 (Helga Engs Hus)

Auditorium 1

Helga Engs Hus

Sem Sælands vei 7, 0371 OSLO Norway

Speaker

Marc Heumüller (Institut für Kernphysik, TU Darmstadt)

Description

The giant dipole resonance (GDR) represents one of the most fundamental nuclear excitations and dominates the photoresponse of virtually all nuclei. Its geometrical viewing is an isovector oscillation of the proton against the neutron body. This model also provides predictions for the $\gamma$-decay behavior of the GDR in elastic photon and $2^+_1$ Raman scattering reactions.

To rigorously test these for the first time, recently a photonuclear experiment was performed on the GDRs of the spherical and deformed nuclides $^{140}$Ce and $^{154}$Sm, respectively, at the High Intensity $\gamma$-ray Source (HI$\gamma$S) at TUNL, USA [1].
HI$\gamma$S's quasi-monochromatic, polarized, and tunable photon beam was employed to selectively photoexcite energy slices of the GDR and subsequently measure their $\gamma$-decay.
The results are in stunning agreement with the geometrical model predictions and provide new insights on the shapes of the nuclei, in particular the degree of triaxiality of the deformed $^{154}$Sm nucleus.

To first determine the ratio of cross sections for elastic photon scattering versus Smekal-Raman scattering to the first excited state of the ground-state rotational band in the strongly deformed nucleus $^{164}$Dy, a similar nuclear resonance fluorescence experiment was conducted on the GDR of $^{164}$Dy in 2023.
$^{164}$Dy is of particular interest due to its suspected higher degree of triaxiality. Experimental $\gamma$-ray spectra, the current status of the data analysis, and first results will be presented.

This work is supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) – Project-ID 499256822 – GRK 2891 'Nuclear Photonics' and by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Nuclear Physics, under Grants No. DE-FG02-97ER41041 (UNC), and No. DE-FG02-97ER41033 (Duke, TUNL).

[1]J. Kleemann et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 134, 022503 (2025)

Author

Marc Heumüller (Institut für Kernphysik, TU Darmstadt)

Co-authors

Jörn Kleemann (Institut für Kernphysik, TU Darmstadt) Norbert Pietralla (Institut für Kernphysik, TU Darmstadt) Akaa Daniel Ayangeakaa (Triangle Universities Nuclear Laboratory, Durham, NC 27708, USA) Sean Finch (Triangle Universities Nuclear Laboratory, Durham, NC 27708, USA) David Gribble (Triangle Universities Nuclear Laboratory, Durham, NC 27708, USA) Julian Hauf (Institut für Kernphysik, TU Darmstadt) Johann Isaak (Institut für Kernphysik, TU Darmstadt) Xavier K.-H. James (Triangle Universities Nuclear Laboratory, Durham, NC 27708, USA) Robert V. F. Janssens (Triangle Universities Nuclear Laboratory, Durham, NC 27708, USA) Samantha Johnson (Triangle Universities Nuclear Laboratory, Durham, NC 27708, USA) Tyler Kowalewski (Triangle Universities Nuclear Laboratory, Durham, NC 27708, USA) Bastian Löher (GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung GmbH, 64291 Darmstadt, Germany) Oliver Papst (Institut für Kernphysik, TU Darmstadt) Kiriaki Prifti (Institut für Kernphysik, TU Darmstadt) Antonella Saracino (Triangle Universities Nuclear Laboratory, Durham, NC 27708, USA) Deniz Savran (GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung GmbH, 64291 Darmstadt, Germany) Nirupama Sensharma (Triangle Universities Nuclear Laboratory, Durham, NC 27708, USA) Volker Werner (Institut für Kernphysik, TU Darmstadt)

Presentation materials