The properties of exotic nuclei on the verge of existence play a fundamental part in our understanding of nuclear interactions. Exceedingly neutron-rich nuclei become sensitive to new aspects of nuclear forces. Calcium, with its doubly magic isotopes (40)Ca and (48)Ca, is an ideal test for nuclear shell evolution, from the valley of stability to the limits of existence. With a closed proton shell, the calcium isotopes mark the frontier for calculations with three-nucleon forces from chiral effective field theory. Whereas predictions for the masses of (51)Ca and (52)Ca have been validated by direct measurements, it is an open question as to how nuclear masses evolve for heavier calcium isotopes. Here we report the mass determination of the exotic calcium isotopes (53)Ca and (54)Ca, using the multi-reflection time-of-flight mass spectrometer of ISOLTRAP at CERN. The measured masses unambiguously establish a prominent shell closure at neutron number N = 32, in excellent agreement with our theoretical calculations. These results increase our understanding of neutron-rich matter and pin down the subtle components of nuclear forces that are at the forefront of theoretical developments constrained by quantum chromodynamics.
Atomic nuclei exhibit single-particle and collective degrees of freedom, making them susceptible to variations in size and shape when adding or removing nucleons. The rare cases where dramatic changes in shape occur with the removal of only a single nucleon are key for pinpointing the components of the nuclear interaction driving nuclear deformation. Laser spectroscopy probes the nuclear charge distribution, revealing attometer-scale variations and highlighting sensitivity to the proton (Z) and neutron (N) configurations of the nucleus. The lead isotopes, which possess a closed proton shell (Z = 82), are spherical and steadily shrink with decreasing N. A surprisingly different story was observed for their close neighbours, the mercury isotopes (Z = 80) almost half a century ago 1, 2 : Whilst the even-mass isotopes follow the trend seen for lead, the odd-mass isotopes 181,183,185 Hg exhibit a striking increase in charge radius. This dramatic 'shape staggering' between evenand odd-mass isotopes remains a unique feature of the nuclear chart. Here we present the extension of laser spectroscopy results that reach 177 Hg. An unprecedented combination of state-of-theart techniques including resonance laser ionization, nuclear spectroscopy and mass spectrometry, has established 181 Hg as the shape-staggering endpoint. Accompanying this experimental tour de force, recent computational advances incorporating the largest valence space ever used have been exploited to provide Monte-Carlo Shell Model calculations, in remarkable agreement with the experimental observations. Thus, microscopic insight into the subtle interplay of nuclear interactions that give rise to this phenomenon has been obtained, identifying the shape-driving orbitals. Although shape staggering in the mercury isotopes is a unique and localized feature in the nuclear chart, the underlying mechanism that has now been uncovered nicely describes the duality of single-particle and collective degrees of freedom in atomic nuclei.
The recently confirmed neutron-shell closure at N=32 has been investigated for the first time below the magic proton number Z=20 with mass measurements of the exotic isotopes (52,53)K, the latter being the shortest-lived nuclide investigated at the online mass spectrometer ISOLTRAP. The resulting two-neutron separation energies reveal a 3 MeV shell gap at N=32, slightly lower than for 52Ca, highlighting the doubly magic nature of this nuclide. Skyrme-Hartree-Fock-Bogoliubov and ab initio Gorkov-Green function calculations are challenged by the new measurements but reproduce qualitatively the observed shell effect.
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