Publications by authors named "J Saren"

Atomic nuclei serve as prime laboratories for investigations of complex quantum phenomena, where minor nucleon rearrangements cause significant structural changes. Pb is the heaviest known neutron-deficient Pb isotope that can exhibit three distinct shapes: prolate, oblate, and spherical, with nearly degenerate excitation energies. Here we report on the combined results from three state-of-the-art measurements to directly observe these deformations in Pb.

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Article Synopsis
  • Blood pressure variability (BPV) may predict negative health outcomes (NHOs) in adults aged ≥65, but current standards for what constitutes high BPV are lacking.
  • * A systematic review of 49 studies found that high systolic BPV is associated with greater odds of cardiovascular disease and cerebral deterioration compared to mean blood pressure (mBP).
  • * The study suggests that high BPV and mean BP both have significant impacts on health, with BPV offering notable predictive value, and provides guidelines for identifying elevated BPV in clinical settings.
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Solar energy is a limitless energy resource that can be used to produce electricity forever. Photogalvanic cells can convert solar energy into electricity with inherent power storage. The electrolyte(s) and a combination of two electrodes are the main materials required for fabrication of these cells.

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Using the fusion-evaporation reaction ^{96}Ru(^{58}Ni,p4n)^{149}Lu and the MARA vacuum-mode recoil separator, a new proton-emitting isotope ^{149}Lu has been identified. The measured decay Q value of 1920(20) keV is the highest measured for a ground-state proton decay, and it naturally leads to the shortest directly measured half-life of 450_{-100}^{+170}  ns for a ground-state proton emitter. The decay rate is consistent with l_{p}=5 emission, suggesting a dominant πh_{11/2} component for the wave function of the proton-emitting state.

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Lifetimes of the first excited 2^{+} and 4^{+} states in the extremely neutron-deficient nuclide ^{172}Pt have been measured for the first time using the recoil-distance Doppler shift and recoil-decay tagging techniques. An unusually low value of the ratio B(E2:4_{1}^{+}→2_{1}^{+})/B(E2:2_{1}^{+}→0_{gs}^{+})=0.55(19) was found, similar to a handful of other such anomalous cases observed in the entire Segré chart.

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