“…Many studies indicate that in Mo and Ru isotopes, the coexisting shapes tend to merge to form relatively rigid, triaxially-deformed ground states [22,25,36,43,48,49] or, in the least, potential energy surfaces that are γ-soft [21,23,[50][51][52]. The rigidity of triaxial deformation in nuclei remains an open question, but the general consensus is that triaxiality occurs in isotopes that are transitional between two regions where widely different shapes are favored: either between prolate and oblate regions, or between spherical and substantially (quadrupole) deformed regions [14,21,24].…”