Location of the Neutron Dripline at Fluorine and Neon

A search for the heaviest isotopes of fluorine, neon, and sodium was conducted by fragmentation of an intense ^{48}Ca beam at 345  MeV/nucleon with a 20-mm-thick beryllium target and identification of isotopes in the large-acceptance separator BigRIPS at the RIKEN Radioactive Isotope Beam Factory. N...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physical review letters 2019-11, Vol.123 (21), p.212501-212501, Article 212501
Hauptverfasser: Ahn, D S, Fukuda, N, Geissel, H, Inabe, N, Iwasa, N, Kubo, T, Kusaka, K, Morrissey, D J, Murai, D, Nakamura, T, Ohtake, M, Otsu, H, Sato, H, Sherrill, B M, Shimizu, Y, Suzuki, H, Takeda, H, Tarasov, O B, Ueno, H, Yanagisawa, Y, Yoshida, K
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A search for the heaviest isotopes of fluorine, neon, and sodium was conducted by fragmentation of an intense ^{48}Ca beam at 345  MeV/nucleon with a 20-mm-thick beryllium target and identification of isotopes in the large-acceptance separator BigRIPS at the RIKEN Radioactive Isotope Beam Factory. No events were observed for ^{32,33}F, ^{35,36}Ne, and ^{38}Na and only one event for ^{39}Na after extensive running. Comparison with predicted yields excludes the existence of bound states of these unobserved isotopes with high confidence levels. The present work indicates that ^{31}F and ^{34}Ne are the heaviest bound isotopes of fluorine and neon, respectively. The neutron dripline has thus been experimentally confirmed up to neon for the first time since ^{24}O was confirmed to be the dripline nucleus nearly 20 years ago. These data provide new keys to understanding the nuclear stability at extremely neutron-rich conditions.
ISSN:0031-9007
1079-7114
DOI:10.1103/PhysRevLett.123.212501