Nigrogen-9 - a ground-state five-proton emitter at the edge of the chart of nuclides
ORAL · Invited
Abstract
For light nuclei just beyond the proton drip line, one finds a region of both ground-state single- and two-proton emitters. Even further out from this drip line, a small number of three- and four-proton emitters have been observed. At present there are only two known 4p emitters; 8C and 18Mg. On the other side of the chart of nuclides, one 4n emitter (28O) has been observed beyond the neutron drip line. In the regions even further removed from both these drip lines one may find nuclides that decay by emitting even more nucleons. Such exotic states are expected to be located near the boundary of the chart of nuclides where the decay widths of such exotic states are so large so that they can be not be well differentiated from the rest of continuum. In this talk we will show strong evidence for the existence of 9N, with five unbound protons outside of an alpha-particle core. This resonance was produced in the fragmentation of a secondary 13O beam provided by the National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory. The decay products were detected in a highly-pixelated array and the invariant masses of events with 5 protons and an alpha particle were determined. Great care must be taken in understanding the background in the invariant-mass distribution from detected 5p+α events where some of the protons are produced promptly in the fragmentation reaction and not from resonance decay. Evidence for one, or more likely two, 9N states have been found in the invariant-mass spectrum. These exotic nuclides are great testing grounds for nuclear-structure models that include the coupling of the continuum. Nitrogen-9 was also studied theoretically in the Gamow shell model and ½+ and ½- states are predicted at the energies of the two likely invariant-mass peaks in the experimental distribution.
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Publication: 1) R.J. Charity et al. Phys. Rev. Lett. 131 (2013) 172501<br>2) R.J. Charity and L.G. Sobotka, Phys. Rev. C 108 (2023) 044318
Presenters
Robert J Charity
Washington University, St. Louis
Authors
Robert J Charity
Washington University, St. Louis
J. Wylie
Facility for Rare Isotope Beams
S. M Wang
Fudan University
T. B Webb
Washington University
Kyle W Brown
Michigan State University
Giordano Cerizza
Facility for Rare Isotope Beams (FRIB)
Zbigniew Chajecki
Western Michigan University
Jon Elson
Washington University
Justin B Estee
Michigan State University
Daniel E Hoff
Washington University
Sean A Kuvin
Los Alamos National Laboratory
William G Lynch
Michigan State University
Juan Manfredi
Air Force Institute of Technology
Nicola Michel
Institute of Modern Physics
Daniel G McNeel
Los Alamos National Laboratory
Pierre Morfouace
Michigan State University
Witold Nazarewicz
Michigan State University
Cole D Pruitt
Lawrence Livermore National Lab, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Clementine A Santamaria
Michigan State University & Morgan State University