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Experiments searching for neutrinoless double beta decay ($0 ubetabeta$) require precise energy calibration and extremely low backgrounds. One of the most popular isotopes for $0 ubetabeta$ experiments is $^{136}$Xe. In support of these experiments, the neutron inelastic scattering properties of this isotope have been measured at the GErmanium Array for Neutron Induced Excitations (GEANIE) at the Los Alamos Neutron Science Center. Time-of-flight techniques are utilized with high-purity germanium detectors to search for inelastic scattering $gamma$ rays for neutron energies between 0.7 and 100 MeV. Limits are set on production of yet-unobserved $gamma$ rays in the energy range critical for $0 ubetabeta$ studies, and measurements are made of multiple $gamma$-ray production cross sections. In particular, we have measured the production of the 1313 keV $gamma$ ray which comes from the transition of the first-excited to ground state of $^{136}$Xe. This neutron-induced $gamma$ line may be useful for a novel energy calibration technique, described in this paper.
The $ u0h_{9/2}$ and $ u0i_{13/2}$ strength at $^{137}$Xe, a single neutron outside the $N=82$ shell closure, has been determined using the $^{136}$Xe($alpha$,$^3$He)$^{137}$Xe reaction carried out at 100 MeV. We confirm the recent observation of the
Moller scattering is one of the most fundamental processes in QED. Understanding it to high precision is necessary for a variety of modern nuclear and particle physics experiments. In a recent calculation, existing soft-photon radiative corrections w
Background: Double charge exchange (DCE) nuclear reactions have recently attracted much interest as tools to provide experimentally driven information about nuclear matrix elements of interest in the context of neutrinoless double-beta decay. In this
New measurements of the neutron-neutron quasifree scattering cross section in neutron-deuteron breakup at an incident neutron energy of 10.0 MeV are reported. The experiment setup was optimized to evaluate the technique for determining the integrated
The neutron and its hypothetical mirror counterpart, a sterile state degenerate in mass, could spontaneously mix in a process much faster than the neutron $beta$-decay. Two groups have performed a series of experiments in search of neutron - mirror-n