The energies of the excited states in very neutron-rich (42)Si and (41,43)P have been measured using in-beam gamma-ray spectroscopy from the fragmentation of secondary beams of (42,44)S at 39A MeV. The low 2(+) energy of (42)Si, 770(19) keV, together with the level schemes of (41,43)P, provides evidence for the disappearance of the Z=14 and N=28 spherical shell closures, which is ascribed mainly to the action of proton-neutron tensor forces. New shell model calculations indicate that (42)Si is best described as a well-deformed oblate rotor.
Isomeric low-lying states were identified and investigated in the 75 Cu nucleus. Two states at 61.8(5)-and 128.3(7)-keV excitation energies with half-lives of 370(40)-and 170(15)-ns were assigned as 75m1 Cu and 75m2 Cu, respectively. The measured half-lives combined with the recent spin assignment of the ground state allow one to deduce tentatively spin and parity of the two isomers and the dominant multipolarities of the isomeric transitions with respect to the systematics of the Cu isotopes. Shell-model calculations using an up-to-date effective interaction reproduce the evolution of the 1/2 − , 3/2 − , and 5/2 − states for the neutron-rich odd-mass Cu isotopes when filling the νg 9/2 . The results indicate a significant change in the nuclear structure in this region, where a single-particle 5/2 − state coexists with more and more collective 3/2 − and 1/2 − levels at low excitation energies.
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