Probing Deformation Around Z=14 and N=28: Decay Spectroscopy of Exotic Si Isotopes
ORAL · Invited
Abstract
The N=28 shell closure, traditionally robust in stable nuclei like 48Ca, is observed to erode far from stability mainly due to spin-flip interactions, the tensor force, and/or three-body effects. These influences reduce the νf7/2-νp3/2 gap promoting deformation in neutron-rich isotones below Z=20. 42Si with N= 28 is presumed to have an oblate ground state in spite of the 28 neutrons that form it. In this work, we report on decay spectroscopy of exotic Si isotopes, produced and studied at the Facility for Rare Isotope Beams (FRIB) using the FRIB Decay Station initiator (FDSi). The decay spectroscopy of 41,42Si attempted for the first time will be reported. The observed level-scheme, intensities of low-lying states populated via β, βn, and potentially β2n decay to P isotopes will project a detailed picture of this region of the chart of nuclides. Together with measured half-lives of the parent isotopes, we will be able illuminate the structure of isotopes near N=28. The results will provide benchmarks for state-of-the-art shell-model calculations and help clarify shape evolution along the N=28 isotones.
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Presenters
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Peter C Bender
University of Massachusetts Lowell
Authors
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Peter C Bender
University of Massachusetts Lowell
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Vandana Tripathi
Florida State University
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Heather L Crawford
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
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James M Allmond
Physics Division, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, Oak Ridge, Tennessee 37831, USA
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Benjamin P Crider
Mississippi State University
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Robert K. Grzywacz
University of Tennessee
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Sean N Liddick
Facility for Rare isotope Beams; Department of Chemistry, Michigan State University, Facility for Rare Isotope Beams, Michigan State University