Almost medium-free measurement of the Hoyle state direct-decay component with a TPC
J. Bishop, G.V. Rogachev, S. Ahn, E. Aboud, M. Barbui, A. Bosh, C., Hunt, H. Jayatissa, E. Koshchiy, R. Malecek, S.T. Marley, E.C. Pollacco, C.D., Pruitt, B.T. Roeder, A. Saastamoinen, L.G. Sobotka, and S. Upadhyayula

TL;DR
This study uses a novel TPC technique to measure the decay of the Hoyle state in carbon-12, setting a new upper limit on its direct 3-alpha decay component and supporting the alpha-condensate hypothesis.
Contribution
The paper introduces a new experimental method with a Bayesian analysis to measure the Hoyle state's decay components, achieving an almost medium-free measurement of the direct decay fraction.
Findings
Direct decay component is less than 0.043% at 95% confidence level.
Results agree with previous studies, indicating a very small non-sequential decay fraction.
Demonstrates sensitivity to the absolute branching ratio of the Hoyle state decay.
Abstract
Background: The structure of the Hoyle state, a highly -clustered state at 7.65 MeV in , has long been the subject of debate. Understanding if the system comprises of three weakly-interacting -particles in the 0s orbital, known as an -condensate state, is possible by studying the decay branches of the Hoyle state. Purpose: The direct decay of the Hoyle state into three -particles, rather than through the ground state, can be identified by studying the energy partition of the 3 -particles arising from the decay. This paper provides details on the break-up mechanism of the Hoyle stating using a new experimental technique. Method: By using beta-delayed charged-particle spectroscopy of using the TexAT (Texas Active Target) TPC, a high-sensitivity measurement of the direct 3 decay ratio can…
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