4.5 Article

Upper limits for the existence of long-lived isotopes of roentgenium in natural gold

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW C
Volume 83, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevC.83.015801

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A sensitive search for isotopes of a superheavy element (SHE) in natural gold materials has been performed with accelerator mass spectrometry at the Vienna Environmental Research Accelerator, which is based on a 3-MV tandem accelerator. Because the most likely SHE in gold is roentgenium (Rg, Z = 111), the search concentrated on Rg isotopes. Two different mass regions were explored: (i) For the neutron-deficient isotopes (261)Rg and (265)Rg, abundance limits in gold of 3 x 10(-16) were reached (no events observed). This is in stark contrast to the findings of Marinov et al. [Int. J. Mod. Phys. E 18, 621 (2009)], who reported positive identification of these isotopes with inductively coupled plasma sector field mass spectrometry in the (1 - 10) x 10(-10) abundance range. (ii) Theoretical models of SHEs predict a region of increased stability around the proton and neutron shell closures of Z = 114 and N = 184. We therefore investigated eight heavy Rg isotopes, (A)Rg, A = 289, 290, 291, 292, 293, 294, 295, and 296. For six isotopes no events were observed, setting limits also in the 10-16 abundance range. For (291)Rg and (294)Rg we observed two and nine events, respectively, which results in an abundance in the 10(-15) range. However, pileup of a particularly strong background in these cases makes a positive identification as Rg isotopes-even after pileup correction-unlikely.

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