Catherine Olmer

Catherine Olmer's picture
Professor Emeritus, Indiana University and Chief Financial Officer
WonderLab Museum of Science, Health and Technology
Research Areas: 
Nuclear Physics
Research Type: 
Experimentalist
Education: 
Ph.D. 1976, Yale University
Advisor: 
Karl A. Erb
Dissertation Title: 
Heavy-Ion Induced Multinucleon Transfer Reactions in the 2S-1D Shell
Dissertation Abstract: 

In order to investigate whether new nuclear structure information can be obtained from studying the direct transfer of more than two nucleons using heavy-ion projectiles, we have investigated the 28Si(16O, 12C) 32S and 12C (14N, d) 24Mg reactions as candidates for the direct transfer of four- and twelve-nucleons, respectively.

Using a new experimental technique developed in this work–the counter telescope-position sensitive detector kinematic coincidence method–both angular distributions (22˚ < θL < 95˚ , EL = 55.54 MeV) and excitation functions (θL = 26˚, 50 < EL < 63 MeV) were obtained for strongly excited states below 10 MeV in excitation in the first reaction. For the 12C + 14N interaction, a measurement of the angular distri­butions (25° < 0L < 14o0,    = 20,25 MeV) for proton, deuteron and alpha-particle emission to many low lying states suf­ficed for the present purposes.

Comparison of Hauser-Feshbach statistical model cal­culations with these data indicated that the light-particle production from the 12C + 14N interaction as investigated here is predominantly compound nuclear in nature. On the other hand, the selectively strong population of a few states in 32S by the 28Si(16O,12C)32S reaction is primarily direct. The structure of these states was deduced from available light-ion-induced transfer reaction studies and shell model calculations: the importance,of shell model con­ figurations is indicated, and an alpha-particle transfer model can not account for the observed selectivity.

Calculations of the 28Si(16O,12C)32S reaction with a microscopic multinucleon transfer code indicate selectivities consistent with the present results. Moreover, the calcu­ lations suggest the presence of other, unexpected selecti­vities, all of which may be understood on a physical basis, and some of which appear as an extension of a similar effect seen in two-nucleon transfer reactions.