Proton Shell Gaps in N=28 Nuclei from the First Complete Spectroscopy Study with the FRIB Decay Station Initiator
ORAL · Invited
Abstract
Exotic nuclei can exhibit properties different from their stable counterparts. Changes in shell structure observed in very neutron-rich nuclei give rise to the islands of inversion. Conventionally, in nuclei with N~28 and Z<20, the Fermi surfaces for neutrons and protons are located within the pf and sd shells, respectively. The selectivity of beta-decay motivates decay strength measurements to probe the nuclear shell effects of the parent and daughter nucleus. In the Gamow-Teller transitions, sd and pf neutrons transform into protons in respective spin-orbit partner orbitals. The first complete measurement of the beta-decay strength distribution of 45Cl, performed at FRIB, exemplifies the ability of Gamow-Teller transitions to populate states associated with proton excitation across major shells, allowing for the first benchmark of the Z=20 shell gap along N=28 below 48Ca. The measurement utilized the two focal plane system of the FRIB Decay Station Initiator (FDSi[1]), with a combination of high-resolution neutron (NEXTi) and gamma-ray (DEGAi) spectroscopy data alongside total absorption spectroscopy data (MTAS). The complete decay strength is extracted up to 8 MeV in 45Ar and compared to large-scale shell model calculations using the SDPF-MU interaction. This sensitive approach found that a reduced Z=20 shell gap best reproduced the data.
[1] https://fds.ornl.gov/initiator/
* This work is supported by: NNSA DOE DE-NA0003899 and DOE DE-FG02-96ER40983
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Publication:I. Cox et al., submitted to Physical Review Letters (2023)
Presenters
Ian C Cox
University of Tennessee
Authors
Ian C Cox
University of Tennessee
Zhengyu Xu
University of Tennessee Knoxville
Robert Grzywacz
University of Tennessee
Wei Jia Ong
Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab
Bertis C Rasco
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
Noritaka Kitamura
University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Donnie Hoskins
University of Tennessee Knoxville
Shree Neupane
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Thomas Ruland
Oak Ridge National Laboratory
James Allmond
Physics Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tennessee 37831, USA