There is strong circumstantial evidence that the shape of atomic nuclei with particular values of Z and N prefers to assume octupole deformation, in which the nucleus is distorted into a pear shape that loses the reflection symmetry of a quadrupole-deformed (rugby ball) shape prevalent in nuclei. Recently, useable intensities of accelerated beams of heavy, radioactive ions have become available at the REX-ISOLDE facility at CERN. This has allowed electric octupole transition strengths, a direct measure of octupole correlations, to be determined for short-lived isotopes of radon and radium expected to be unstable to pear-like distortions. The data are used to discriminate differing theoretical approaches to the description of the octupole phenomena, and also help restrict the choice of candidates for studies of atomic electric-dipole moments, that provide stringent tests of extensions to the Standard Model.
The Advanced GAmma Tracking Array (AGATA) is a European project to develop and operate the next generation γ-ray spectrometer. AGATA is based on the technique of γ-ray energy tracking in electrically segmented high-purity germanium crystals. This technique requires the accurate determination of the energy, time and position of every interaction as a γ ray deposits its energy within the detector volume. Reconstruction of the full interaction path results in a detector with very high efficiency and excellent spectral response. The realisation of γ-ray tracking and AGATA is a result of many technical advances. These include the development of encapsulated highly segmented germanium detectors assembled in a triple cluster detector cryostat, an electronics system with fast digital sampling and a data acquisition system to process the data at a high rate. The full characterisation of the crystals was measured and compared with detector-response simulations. This enabled pulse-shape analysis algorithms, to extract energy, time and position, to be employed. In addition, tracking algorithms for event reconstruction were developed. The first phase of AGATA is now complete and operational in its first physics campaign. In the future AGATA will be moved between laboratories in Europe and operated in a series of campaigns to take advantage of the different beams and facilities available to maximise its science output. The paper reviews all the achievements made in the AGATA project including all the necessary infrastructure to operate and support the spectrometer
The gamma decay from Coulomb excitation of 68Ni at 600 MeV/nucleon on a Au target was measured using the RISING setup at the fragment separator of GSI. The 68Ni beam was produced by a fragmentation reaction of 86Kr at 900 MeV/nucleon on a 9Be target and selected by the fragment separator. The gamma rays produced at the Au target were measured with HPGe detectors at forward angles and with BaF2 scintillators at backward angles. The measured spectra show a peak centered at approximately 11 MeV, whose intensity can be explained in terms of an enhanced strength of the dipole response function (pygmy resonance). Such pygmy structure has been predicted in this unstable neutron-rich nucleus by theory.
The ''island of inversion'' nucleus 32 Mg has been studied by a (t, p) two neutron transfer reaction in inverse kinematics at REX-ISOLDE. The shape coexistent excited 0 þ state in 32 Mg has been identified by the characteristic angular distribution of the protons of the ÁL ¼ 0 transfer. The excitation energy of 1058 keV is much lower than predicted by any theoretical model. The low-ray intensity observed for the decay of this 0 þ state indicates a lifetime of more than 10 ns. Deduced spectroscopic amplitudes are compared with occupation numbers from shell-model calculations. The evolution of shell structure in exotic nuclei as a function of the proton (Z) and neutron (N) number is currently at the center of many theoretical and experimental investigations [1,2]. It has been realized that the interaction of the last valence protons and neutrons, in particular, the monopole component of the residual interaction between those nucleons, can lead to significant shifts in the single-particle energies, leading to the disappearance of classic shell closures and the appearance of new shell gaps [3]. A prominent example is the collapse of the N ¼ 20 shell gap in the neutron-rich oxygen isotopes where instead a new magic shell gap appears for 24 O at N ¼ 16 [4,5]. Recent work showed that the disappearance of the N ¼ 20 shell can be attributed to the monopole effect of the tensor force [3,6,7]. The reduced strength of the attractive interaction between the proton d 5=2 and the neutron d 3=2 orbitals causes the d 3=2 orbital to rise in energy and come closer to the f 7=2 orbital. In regions without pronounced shell closures correlations between the valence nucleons may become as large as the spacing of the single-particle energies. This can thus lead to particle-hole excitations to higher-lying single-particle states enabling deformed configurations to be lowered in energy. This may result in low-lying collective excitations, the coexistence of different shapes at low energies or even the deformation of the ground state for nuclei with the conventional magic number N ¼ 20. Such an effect occurs in the ''island of inversion'', one of most studied regions of exotic nuclei in the nuclear chart. In this region of neutron-rich nuclei around the magic number N ¼ 20 strongly deformed ground states in Ne, Na, and Mg isotopes have been observed [8-11]. Because of the reduction of the N ¼ 20 shell gap, quadrupole correlations can enable low-lying deformed 2p-2h intruder states from the fp shell to compete with spherical normal neutron 0p-0h states of the sd shell. In this situation the promotion of a neutron pair across the N ¼ 20 gap can result in deformed intruder ground states. Consequentially, the competition of two configurations can lead to the coexistence of spherical and deformed 0 þ states in the neutron-rich 30;32 Mg nuclei [12]. Coulomb excitation experiments have shown that 30 Mg has a rather small BðE2Þ value for the 0 þ gs ! 2 þ 1 transition [13,14] placing this nucleus outside the island of inversion. The excited deform...
The reduced transition probabilities, B E2; 0 gs ! 2 1 , have been measured in the radioactive isotopes 108;106 Sn using subbarrier Coulomb excitation at the REX-ISOLDE facility at CERN. Deexcitation rays were detected by the highly segmented MINIBALL Ge-detector array. The results, B E2; 0 gs ! 2 1 0:222 19 e 2 b 2 for 108 Sn and B E2; 0 gs ! 2 1 0:195 39 e 2 b 2 for 106 Sn were determined relative to a stable 58 Ni target. The resulting B E2 values are 30% larger than shell-model predictions and deviate from the generalized seniority model. This experimental result may point towards a weakening of the N Z 50 shell closure. DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.101.012502 PACS numbers: 23.20.Js, 21.60.Cs, 25.70.De, 27.60.+j Precision measurements in unstable nuclei together with recently developed models of the nucleon-nucleon interaction, stemming from many-body techniques and QCD, show promise to improve our understanding of the finer aspects of the dynamics of the atomic nucleus. One approach to this question is to measure reduced transition probabilities -B E2; 0 gs ! 2 1 -for specific nuclei in the vicinity of a shell closure and to compare these results with calculations based on such models. In particular, one of the pressing questions in nuclear physics today is whether the shell closures, that are well established close to stability, remain so also for isotopes with a more extreme proton-toneutron ratio. Intuitive models, such as the generalized seniority scheme [1], predict that these B E2 values follow a parabolic trend, that peaks at midshell, for a sequence of isotopes between two shell closures. In the following we address the 100 Sn shell closure and consequently present results from measurements in the sequence of neutron-deficient even-mass Sn isotopes. This approach has been made possible by newly developed facilities that produce high-quality radioactive ion beams. Recent measurements in 110;108 Sn [2 -4] consistently deviate from the broken-pair model as given by the generalized seniority scheme and from current large-scale shell-model calculations [2]. Parallel work [4], using intermediate energy Coulomb excitation, suggests a constant trend of the reduced transition probabilities extending to 106 Sn. In this Letter we report results from the first measurements of 108;106 Sn using subbarrier Coulomb excitation. This is the only experiment so far for 106 Sn that has permitted for complete control of the scattering process and thus explicitly fulfills the conditions for safe Coulomb excitation. Our result still deviates significantly from theoretical predictions but indicates a decreasing trend of the B E2 with a decreasing number of valence particles outside of the 100 Sn core. Note that with this Letter three different isotopes have been used for normalization as 112 Sn [2] and 197 Au [4] have been used previously. All three experiments yield similar PRL 101, 012502 (2008)
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