Radial excitations and their potential impact on Fermi $\beta$-decay rates
L. Xayavong, Y. Lim, N. A. Smirnova, and Calvin W. Johnson

TL;DR
This study examines how radial excitations influence Fermi beta-decay rates, revealing that their inclusion tends to decrease decay matrix elements and may worsen agreement with the Standard Model.
Contribution
The paper introduces a method to explicitly include radial excitations in shell-model calculations, improving the understanding of their impact on beta-decay matrix elements.
Findings
Radial excitations contribute negatively to decay matrix elements.
Their effect increases with larger model spaces.
Including radial excitations worsens agreement with the Standard Model.
Abstract
We investigate the contribution of radial excitations to Fermi -decay matrix element. To this end, exact no-core shell model calculations are performed for the mirror decay of tritium, where full convergence can be achieved on an ordinary computer. The differences between the isospin-mixing correction values obtained in the full and in a restricted model spaces are matched to the radial overlap correction term, analogous to that required in the shell-model approach, where the configuration space is extremely limited. We examine this complementary correction term using a nonorthogonal harmonic-oscillator basis, generated by slightly differentiating the oscillator frequencies between the initial and final nuclei, while all desirable properties, including translational invariance, are still preserved. For , we find that the radial excitation contribution is…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsParticle physics theoretical and experimental studies · Radioactive Decay and Measurement Techniques · Neutrino Physics Research
