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First Observation of ^{20}B and ^{21}B.

Authors :
Leblond S
Marqués FM
Gibelin J
Orr NA
Kondo Y
Nakamura T
Bonnard J
Michel N
Achouri NL
Aumann T
Baba H
Delaunay F
Deshayes Q
Doornenbal P
Fukuda N
Hwang JW
Inabe N
Isobe T
Kameda D
Kanno D
Kim S
Kobayashi N
Kobayashi T
Kubo T
Lee J
Minakata R
Motobayashi T
Murai D
Murakami T
Muto K
Nakashima T
Nakatsuka N
Navin A
Nishi S
Ogoshi S
Otsu H
Sato H
Satou Y
Shimizu Y
Suzuki H
Takahashi K
Takeda H
Takeuchi S
Tanaka R
Togano Y
Tuff AG
Vandebrouck M
Yoneda K
Source :
Physical review letters [Phys Rev Lett] 2018 Dec 28; Vol. 121 (26), pp. 262502.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

The most neutron-rich boron isotopes ^{20}B and ^{21}B have been observed for the first time following proton removal from ^{22}N and ^{22}C at energies around 230  MeV/nucleon. Both nuclei were found to exist as resonances which were detected through their decay into ^{19}B and one or two neutrons. Two-proton removal from ^{22}N populated a prominent resonancelike structure in ^{20}B at around 2.5 MeV above the one-neutron decay threshold, which is interpreted as arising from the closely spaced 1^{-},2^{-} ground-state doublet predicted by the shell model. In the case of proton removal from ^{22}C, the ^{19}B plus one- and two-neutron channels were consistent with the population of a resonance in ^{21}B 2.47±0.19  MeV above the two-neutron decay threshold, which is found to exhibit direct two-neutron decay. The ground-state mass excesses determined for ^{20,21}B are found to be in agreement with mass surface extrapolations derived within the latest atomic-mass evaluations.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1079-7114
Volume :
121
Issue :
26
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Physical review letters
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
30636115
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.121.262502