1. How Different is the Core of F25 from Og.s.24 ?
- Author
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W. Kim, Rin Yokoyama, K. Kisamori, S. S. Stepanyan, T. Kawahara, Naoki Fukuda, Tomohiro Uesaka, Hiroyuki Miya, D. Kameda, Kenichi Yoshida, Takashi Kubo, Shuichi Ota, Susumu Shimoura, Motonobu Takaki, Yukie Maeda, Hideyuki Sakai, A. Galindo-Uribarri, Kazuyuki Ogata, Shin'ichiro Michimasa, Tomotsugu Wakasa, Sanghoon Hwang, J. Yasuda, T. L. Tang, Yuya Kubota, Hiroshi Tokieda, Masanori Dozono, Kensuke Kusaka, Juzo Zenihiro, T. Fukunaga, Hiroshi Matsubara, Y. Yanagisawa, Didier Beaumel, Elizabeth Padilla-Rodal, A. Obertelli, Naohito Inabe, Hiroyuki Takeda, Motoki Kobayashi, C. S. Lee, T. Fujii, Takashi Wakui, Kentaro Yako, Tetsuo Noro, Satoshi Sakaguchi, Shoichiro Kawase, Masaki Sasano, and Hiroshi Suzuki
- Subjects
Physics ,Proton ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,General Physics and Astronomy ,01 natural sciences ,3. Good health ,Core (optical fiber) ,Crystallography ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Excited state ,0103 physical sciences ,medicine ,Neutron ,Anomaly (physics) ,010306 general physics ,Ground state ,Nuclear theory ,Nucleus - Abstract
The structure of a neutron-rich ^{25}F nucleus is investigated by a quasifree (p,2p) knockout reaction at 270A MeV in inverse kinematics. The sum of spectroscopic factors of π0d_{5/2} orbital is found to be 1.0±0.3. However, the spectroscopic factor with residual ^{24}O nucleus being in the ground state is found to be only 0.36±0.13, while those in the excited state is 0.65±0.25. The result shows that the ^{24}O core of ^{25}F nucleus significantly differs from a free ^{24}O nucleus, and the core consists of ∼35% ^{24}O_{g.s.}. and ∼65% excited ^{24}O. The result may infer that the addition of the 0d_{5/2} proton considerably changes neutron structure in ^{25}F from that in ^{24}O, which could be a possible mechanism responsible for the oxygen dripline anomaly.
- Published
- 2020
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