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First observation of 28O

Authors :
Kondo, Y.
Achouri, N. L.
Falou, H. Al
Atar, L.
Aumann, T.
Baba, H.
Boretzky, K.
Caesar, C.
Calvet, D.
Chae, H.
Chiga, N.
Corsi, A.
Delaunay, F.
Delbart, A.
Deshayes, Q.
Dombrádi, Zs.
Douma, C. A.
Ekström, A.
Elekes, Z.
Forssén, C.
Gašparić, I.
Gheller, J.-M.
Gibelin, J.
Gillibert, A.
Hagen, G.
Harakeh, M. N.
Hirayama, A.
Hoffman, C. R.
Holl, M.
Horvat, A.
Horváth, Á.
Hwang, J. W.
Isobe, T.
Jiang, W. G.
Kahlbow, J.
Kalantar-Nayestanaki, N.
Kawase, S.
Kim, S.
Kisamori, K.
Kobayashi, T.
Körper, D.
Koyama, S.
Kuti, I.
Lapoux, V.
Lindberg, S.
Marqués, F. M.
Masuoka, S.
Mayer, J.
Miki, K.
Murakami, T.
Najafi, M.
Nakamura, T.
Nakano, K.
Nakatsuka, N.
Nilsson, T.
Obertelli, A.
Ogata, K.
de Oliveira Santos, F.
Orr, N. A.
Otsu, H.
Otsuka, T.
Ozaki, T.
Panin, V.
Papenbrock, T.
Paschalis, S.
Revel, A.
Rossi, D.
Saito, A. T.
Saito, T. Y.
Sasano, M.
Sato, H.
Satou, Y.
Scheit, H.
Schindler, F.
Schrock, P.
Shikata, M.
Shimizu, N.
Shimizu, Y.
Simon, H.
Sohler, D.
Sorlin, O.
Stuhl, L.
Sun, Z. H.
Takeuchi, S.
Tanaka, M.
Thoennessen, M.
Törnqvist, H.
Togano, Y.
Tomai, T.
Tscheuschner, J.
Tsubota, J.
Tsunoda, N.
Uesaka, T.
Utsuno, Y.
Vernon, I.
Wang, H.
Yang, Z.
Yasuda, M.
Yoneda, K.
Yoshida, S.
Source :
Nature; August 2023, Vol. 620 Issue: 7976 p965-970, 6p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Subjecting a physical system to extreme conditions is one of the means often used to obtain a better understanding and deeper insight into its organization and structure. In the case of the atomic nucleus, one such approach is to investigate isotopes that have very different neutron-to-proton (N/Z) ratios than in stable nuclei. Light, neutron-rich isotopes exhibit the most asymmetric N/Zratios and those lying beyond the limits of binding, which undergo spontaneous neutron emission and exist only as very short-lived resonances (about 10−21s), provide the most stringent tests of modern nuclear-structure theories. Here we report on the first observation of 28O and 27O through their decay into 24O and four and three neutrons, respectively. The 28O nucleus is of particular interest as, with the Z= 8 and N= 20 magic numbers1,2, it is expected in the standard shell-model picture of nuclear structure to be one of a relatively small number of so-called ‘doubly magic’ nuclei. Both 27O and 28O were found to exist as narrow, low-lying resonances and their decay energies are compared here to the results of sophisticated theoretical modelling, including a large-scale shell-model calculation and a newly developed statistical approach. In both cases, the underlying nuclear interactions were derived from effective field theories of quantum chromodynamics. Finally, it is shown that the cross-section for the production of 28O from a 29F beam is consistent with it not exhibiting a closed N= 20 shell structure.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00280836 and 14764687
Volume :
620
Issue :
7976
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Nature
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs63897805
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-023-06352-6