1. Nuclear structure studies of $^{24}$F
- Author
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Caceres, L., Lepailleur, A., Sorlin, O., Stanoiu, M., Sohler, D., Dombradi, Zs., Bogner, S. K., Brown, B. A., Hergert, H., Holt, J. D., Schwenk, A., Azaiez, F., Bastin, B., Borcea, C., Borcea, R., Bourgeois, C., Elekes, Z., Fülöp, Zs., Grévy, S., Gaudefroy, L., Grinyer, G. F., Guillemaud-Mueller, D., Ibrahim, F., Kerek, A., Krasznahorkay, A., Lewitowicz, M., Lukyanov, S. M., Mrazek, J., Negoita, F., De Oliveira, F., Penionzhkevich, Yu. -E., Podolyak, Zs., Porquet, M. G., Rotaru, F., Roussel-Chomaz, P., Saint-Laurent, M. G., Savajols, H., Sletten, G., Thomas, J. C., Timar, J., Timis, C., and Vajta, Zs.
- Subjects
Nuclear Experiment ,Nuclear Theory - Abstract
The structure of the $^{24}$F nucleus has been studied at GANIL using the $\beta$ decay of $^{24}$O and the in-beam $\gamma$-ray spectroscopy from the fragmentation of projectile nuclei. Combining these complementary experimental techniques, the level scheme of $^{24}$F has been constructed up to 3.6 Mev by means of particle-$\gamma$ and particle-$\gamma\gamma$ coincidence relations. Experimental results are compared to shell-model calculations using the standard USDA and USDB interactions as well as ab-initio valence-space Hamiltonians calculated from the in-medium similarity renormalization group based on chiral two- and three-nucleon forces. Both methods reproduce the measured level spacings well, and this close agreement allows unidentified spins and parities to be consistently assigned., Comment: 5 figures, 2 tables
- Published
- 2015