Statistical-model description of $\gamma$ decay from compound-nucleus resonances
P. Fanto, Y. Alhassid, and H. A. Weidenm\"uller

TL;DR
This study tests the statistical model's prediction that gamma-decay widths follow the Porter-Thomas distribution in compound nuclei, finding that the model accurately describes partial widths and cannot explain recent experimental deviations.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates through a random-matrix model that the Porter-Thomas distribution remains valid for gamma-decay widths, challenging recent experimental claims of large fluctuations.
Findings
Partial gamma-decay widths follow PTD as predicted.
Total gamma-decay width distribution is insensitive to parameter variations.
Statistical model cannot account for recent experimental large fluctuations.
Abstract
The statistical model of compound-nucleus reactions predicts that the fluctuations of the partial -decay widths for a compound-nucleus resonance are governed by the Porter-Thomas distribution (PTD), and that consequently the distribution of total -decay widths is very narrow. However, a recent experiment [Koehler, Larsen, Guttormsen, Siem, and Guber, Phys. Rev. C 88, 041305(R) (2013)] reported large fluctuations of the total -decay widths in the MoMo* reaction, contrary to this expectation. Furthermore, in recent theoretical works it was argued that sufficiently strong channel couplings can cause deviations of the partial width distributions from PTD. Here, we investigate whether the combined influence of a large number of nonequivalent -decay channels, each of which couples weakly to the compound-nucleus resonances, can modify the…
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