Search for $\alpha$ condensed states in $^{13}$C using $\alpha$ inelastic scattering
K. Inaba, Y. Sasamoto, T. Kawabata, M. Fujiwara, Y. Funaki, K., Hatanaka, K. Itoh, M. Itoh, K. Kawase, H. Matsubara, Y. Maeda, K. Suda, S., Sakaguchi, Y. Shimizu, A. Tamii, Y. Tameshige, M. Uchida, T. Uesaka, T., Yamada, H. P. Yoshida

TL;DR
This study investigates the existence of alpha condensed states in carbon-13 using inelastic alpha scattering, identifying potential candidate states and comparing experimental results with theoretical models to advance understanding of nuclear clustering.
Contribution
The paper provides the first experimental search for alpha condensed states in $^{13}$C via inelastic scattering and compares findings with cluster-model predictions.
Findings
Identified a bump at 12.5 MeV related to isoscalar monopole transition.
Suggested the 16.1 MeV state as a candidate for alpha condensation.
Found discrepancies between experimental $IS1$ strengths and theoretical predictions.
Abstract
We searched for the condensed state in C by measuring the inelastic scattering at MeV at forward angles including 0 degrees. We performed the distorted-wave Born-approximation calculation with the single-folding potential and the multipole decomposition analysis to determine the isoscalar transition strengths in C. We found a bump structure around MeV due to the isoscalar monopole () transition. A peak-fit analysis suggested that this bump consisted of several states. We propose that this bump is due to the mirror state of the 13.5 MeV-state in N, which dominantly decays to the condensed state in C. It was speculated that the states around MeV were candidates for the condensed state, but the orthogonality condition model suggests that the…
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