E2 strengths and transition radii difference of one-phonon 2+ states of 92Zr from electron scattering at low momentum transfer
A. Scheikh Obeid, O. Burda, M. Chernykh, A. Krugmann, P. von, Neumann-Cosel, N. Pietralla, I. Poltoratska, V. Yu. Ponomarev, C. Walz

TL;DR
This study uses low-momentum transfer electron scattering to measure transition radii differences of 2+ states in 92Zr, confirming identical proton radii and providing precise B(E2) values for nuclear structure insights.
Contribution
It introduces a model-independent PWBA method to determine transition radii differences of 2+ states in heavy nuclei using electron scattering data.
Findings
Proton transition radii for 2+ states are identical within uncertainties.
Transition strengths B(E2) are precisely measured and compared with QPM calculations.
Electron scattering effectively probes transition radii differences in heavy nuclei.
Abstract
Background: Mixed-symmetry 2+ states in vibrational nuclei are characterized by a sign change between dominant proton and neutron valence-shell components with respect to the fully symmetric 2+ state. The sign can be measured by a decomposition of proton and neutron transition radii with a combination of inelastic electron and hadron scattering [C. Walz et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 106, 062501 (2011)]. For the case of 92Zr, a difference could be experimentally established for the neutron components, while about equal proton transition radii were indicated by the data. Method: Differential cross sections for the excitation of one-phonon 2+ and 3- states in 92Zr have been measured with the (e,e') reaction at the S-DALINAC in a momentum transfer range q = 0.3-0.6 fm^(-1). Results: Transition strengths B(E2;2+_1 -> 0+_1) = 6.18(23), B(E2; 2+_2 -> 0+_1) = 3.31(10) and B(E3; 3-_1 -> 0+_1) =…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
