The coupling of single-particle motion and of vibrations in 4
11Be produces dressed neutrons which spend only a fraction of the time in pure single-particle states, and which weighing differently from the bare neutrons lead to parity inversion. If neutrons are progressively added to a normal nucleus, the Pauli principle forces them into states of higher momentum. When the core becomes neutron saturated the nucleus expels most of the wave function of the last neutrons outside to form a halo, which because of its large size can have lower momentum. It is an open question how nature stabilizes such a fragile system and provides the glue needed to bind the halo neutrons to the core. Here we show that this problem is similar to that of the instability of the normal state of an electron system at zero temperature solved by Cooper, solution which is on the basis of BCS theory of superconductivity. To understand the origin and the consequences of pairing correlations, it is illustrative to study the problem of two electrons interacting on top of a noninteracting Fermi sea of electrons. Thus, all but two of the electrons are assumed to be noninteracting. The background of electrons enter the problem only through the Pauli principle by blocking states below the Fermi surface from participating in the twoelectron problem.This system, first studied by Cooper [1], is unstable against the formation of a bound electron pair, regardless of how weak the interaction is, so long as it is attractive. This result is a consequence of the Fermi statistics and of the existence of the Fermi-sea background, since it is well known that binding does not ordinarily occur in the twobody problem in three dimensions until the strength of the potential exceeds a finite threshold value.Although actual superconductors differ in a fundamental way from a single bound pair model, Cooper pairs can be viewed as the building blocks of the superconductor. Furthermore, in the nuclear case, where the number of fermions participating in the condensate is small, and where the pairing problem can be studied in terms of individual quantal states, the Cooper pair problem can describe realistic situations. In fact it seems to have a concrete realization in the halo nucleus 12 Be͑ 10 Be+2n͒, which can be viewed as two weakly bound neutrons moving around the core 10 Be. By allowing these two neutrons to interact through the bare nucleon-nucleon potential, and to exchange surface vibrations of the core, one is able to provide a unified and quantitative picture of the observed properties of this system. This result, which is quite general, suggests a strategy for designing nuclei at the edges of the neutron drip line, and thus probing the limits of nuclear stability. It also provides evidence of the limits of validity of BCS theory in finite systems: a single Cooper pair.The properties of finite many-body systems are strongly influenced by spatial quantization [2] leading to marked shell structures [3]. This type of quantal size effects are, on the other hand, reno...