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New K isomers in the neutron-rich N=100 isotones Sm162, <…
Author(s) -
R. Yokoyama,
S. Go,
D. Kameda,
T. Kubo,
N. Inabe,
N. Fukuda,
Hiroyuki Takeda,
Hiroshi Suzuki,
Kenji Yoshida,
K. Kusaka,
K. Tanaka,
Y. Yanagisawa,
M. Ohtake,
Hiromi Sato,
Y. Shimizu,
H. Baba,
M. Kurokawa,
D. Nishimura,
T. Ohnishi,
N. Iwasa,
A. Chiba,
Teiko Yamada,
E. Ideguchi,
Toshihiko Fujii,
H. Nıshıbata,
K. Ieki,
D. Murai,
S. Momota,
Yuichi Sato,
Jongwon Hwang,
S. Kim,
O. Tarasov,
D. J. Morrissey,
B. M. Sherrill,
G. S. Simpson,
C. R. Praharaj
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
physical review. c
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.679
H-Index - 235
eISSN - 2469-9993
pISSN - 2469-9985
DOI - 10.1103/physrevc.95.034313
Subject(s) - physics , neutron , nucleon , atomic physics , energy (signal processing) , nuclear physics , quantum mechanics
International audienceVery neutron-rich Z∼60 isotopes produced by in-flight fission of a 345 MeV/nucleon U238 beam at the RI Beam Factory, RIKEN Nishina Center, have been studied by delayed γ-ray spectroscopy. New isomers were discovered in the neutron-rich N=100 isotones Sm162, Eu163, and Gd164. Half-lives, γ-ray energies, and relative intensities of these isomers were obtained. Level schemes were proposed for these nuclei and the first 2+ and 4+ states were assigned for the even-even nuclei. The first 2+ and 4+ state energies decrease as the proton numbers get smaller. The energies and the half-lives of the new isomers are very similar to those of 4− isomers known in less neutron-rich N=100 isotones Er168 and Yb170. A deformed Hartree-Fock with angular momentum projection model suggests Kπ=4− two-quasiparticle states with ν7/2[633]⊗ν1/2[521] configurations with similar excitation energy. The results suggest that neutron-rich N=100 nuclei are well deformed and the deformation gets larger as Z decreases to 62. The onset of K isomers with the same configuration at almost the same energy in N=100 isotones indicates that the neutron single-particle structures of neutron-rich isotones down to Z=62 do not change significantly from those of the Z=70 stable nuclei. Systematics of the excitation energies of new isomers can be explained without the predicted N=100 shell gap

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