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Confirmation of gA quenching using the revised spectrum-shape method for the analysis of the 113Cd β-decay as measured with the COBRA demonstrator

Joel Kostensalo, J. Suhonen, Juliane Volkmer, S. Zatschler, Κ. Zuber

2021Physics Letters B25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In this article we present an updated spectrum-shape analysis of the 113Cd fourfold forbidden non-unique β-decay transition in order to address the quenching of the weak axial-vector coupling gA in low-momentum exchange nuclear processes. The experimental data were collected in a dedicated low-threshold run with the COBRA demonstrator at the LNGS and resulted in 44 individual 113Cd spectra. These data are evaluated in the context of three nuclear model frameworks based on a revised version of the spectrum-shape method and the conserved vector current hypothesis. The novel idea devised in the present work is to fit the value of the small relativistic nuclear matrix element (s-NME) driving the nuclear model calculations, which remained essentially as a free parameter in previous studies. This is done by tuning the nuclear structure calculations and making use of the interplay of gA and the s-NME such that the experimentally known 113Cd half-life gets reproducible by the different frameworks. In this way, a best fit s-NME value can be derived for each of the considered nuclear models, which finally enters the template calculations used to perform the spectrum-shape analysis for each of the obtained 113Cd spectra. The primary analysis strategy results in significantly quenched values of the axial-vector coupling for all three nuclear models: g‾A(ISM)=0.907±0.064, g‾A(MQPM)=0.993±0.063 and g‾A(IBFM-2)=0.828±0.140. Moreover, with our data-driven approach one of the main shortcomings of the spectrum-shape method has been resolved. This achievement is a milestone in the description of strongly forbidden β-decays and adds to the indications for the existence of a quenching of gA in low-momentum exchange nuclear processes.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsQuenching (fluorescence)Context (archaeology)Coupling (piping)Spectral lineMatrix elementSpectrum (functional analysis)Atomic physicsOrder (exchange)Nuclear physicsParticle physicsQuantum mechanicsMechanical engineeringBiologyEngineeringEconomicsPaleontologyFinanceFluorescenceNuclear physics research studiesAdvanced NMR Techniques and ApplicationsQuantum Chromodynamics and Particle Interactions