“…The lightest odd-odd Cs nucleus with known spectroscopic information is the proton emitter 112 Cs [9,10], in which five firm and two tentative transitions have been identified and assigned to the π h 11/2 ⊗ νh 11/2 configuration based on systematics [5]. The low-lying states of Cs nuclei have been studied over many years, also exploiting the high yields of radioactive beams of Cs isotopes at ISOL facilities [11,12]. Two long-lived isomers have been identified in 118 Cs, the nucleus studied in the present work, one with T 1/2 = 14(2) s and low spin I = 2, and the other with T 1/2 = 17(3) s and high spin I = (6, 7, 8) [12,13].…”