APS Logo

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

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

  • Thomas T King

    Oak Ridge National Lab

  • Rebeka Sultana Lubna

    FRIB

  • Krzysztof Piotr P Rykaczewski

    Oak Ridge National Lab

  • Hendrik Schatz

    Michigan State University

  • Bradley M Sherrill

    Michigan State University

  • Oleg B Tarasov

    Michigan State University