The unbound nucleus ^{26}O has been investigated using invariant-mass spectroscopy following one-proton removal reaction from a ^{27}F beam at 201 MeV/nucleon. The decay products, ^{24}O and two neutrons, were detected in coincidence using the newly commissioned SAMURAI spectrometer at the RIKEN Radioactive Isotope Beam Factory. The ^{26}O ground-state resonance was found to lie only 18±3(stat)±4(syst) keV above threshold. In addition, a higher lying level, which is most likely the first 2^{+} state, was observed for the first time at 1.28_{-0.08}^{+0.11} MeV above threshold. Comparison with theoretical predictions suggests that three-nucleon forces, pf-shell intruder configurations, and the continuum are key elements to understanding the structure of the most neutron-rich oxygen isotopes beyond the drip line.
Cross sections of 1n-removal reactions from the neutron-rich nucleus 37 Mg on C and Pb targets and the parallel momentum distributions of the 37 Mg residues from the C target have been measured at 240 MeV=nucleon. A combined analysis of these distinct nuclear-and Coulomb-dominated reaction data shows that the 37 Mg ground state has a small 1n separation energy of 0.22−0.09 MeV and an appreciable p-wave neutron single-particle strength. These results confirm that 37 Mg lies near the edge of the "island of inversion" and has a sizable p-wave neutron halo component, the heaviest such system identified to date.
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