English

Experimental searches for rare alpha and beta decays

Nuclear Experiment 2019-09-02 v1 Instrumentation and Detectors

Abstract

The current status of the experimental searches for rare alpha and beta decays is reviewed. Several interesting observations of alpha and beta decays, previously unseen due to their large half-lives (1015102010^{15} - 10^{20} yr), have been achieved during the last years thanks to the improvements in the experimental techniques and to the underground locations of experiments that allows to suppress backgrounds. In particular, the list includes first observations of alpha decays of 151^{151}Eu, 180^{180}W (both to the ground state of the daughter nuclei), 190^{190}Pt (to excited state of the daughter nucleus), 209^{209}Bi (to the ground and excited states of the daughter nucleus). The isotope 209^{209}Bi has the longest known half-life of T1/21019T_{1/2} \approx 10^{19} yr relatively to alpha decay. The beta decay of 115^{115}In to the first excited state of 115^{115}Sn (Eexc=497.334_{exc} = 497.334 keV), recently observed for the first time, has the QβQ_\beta value of only (147±10)(147 \pm 10) eV, which is the lowest QβQ_\beta value known to-date. Searches and investigations of other rare alpha and beta decays (48^{48}Ca, 50^{50}V, 96^{96}Zr, 113^{113}Cd, 123^{123}Te, 178m2^{178m2}Hf, 180m^{180m}Ta and others) are also discussed.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1908.11458,
  title  = {Experimental searches for rare alpha and beta decays},
  author = {P. Belli and R. Bernabei and F. A. Danevich and A. Incicchitti and V. I. Tretyak},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1908.11458},
  year   = {2019}
}

Comments

41 pages, 33 figures; 11 tables

R2 v1 2026-06-23T11:00:26.477Z