6533b7cefe1ef96bd1257b8c
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Lifetime measurements of excited states in $^{169,171,173}$Os: Persistence of anomalous $B(E2)$ ratios in transitional rare earth nuclei in the presence of a decoupled $i_{13/2}$ valence neutron
Eiji IdeguchiV. ModamioH. BadranC. ScholeyD. HodgeJuha SorriJ. HiltonJ. J. Valiente-dobónPhilippos PapadakisPhilippos PapadakisT. CalverleyBo CederwallH. LiRoberto LiottaB. S. Nara SinghB. S. Nara SinghM. DoncelM. DoncelM. M. GilesMatthew J. TaylorD. M. CullenDaniel CoxDaniel CoxThomas BraunrothM. Kumar RajuH. N. LiuS. JuutinenR. JulinJari PartanenA. ErtoprakA. ErtoprakJanne PakarinenY. D. FangW. ZhangO. AktasPaul GreenleesChong QiSanna StolzeJan SarénMikael SandzeliusP. SubramaniamC. M. PetracheT. GrahnS. MattaP. RahkilaJuha UusitaloPanu Ruotsalainensubject
Quantum phase transitionPhysicsNuclear and High Energy PhysicsisotoopitprotonitValence (chemistry)Isotope010308 nuclear & particles physicsPhysicsQC1-999chemistry.chemical_elementneutronit[PHYS.NEXP]Physics [physics]/Nuclear Experiment [nucl-ex]01 natural scienceschemistryExcited stateNeutron number0103 physical sciencesNeutronOsmiumNuclideAtomic physics010306 general physicsydinfysiikkadescription
International audience; Lifetimes of low-lying excited states in the νi13/2+ bands of the neutron-deficient osmium isotopes 169,171,173Os have been measured for the first time using the recoil-distance Doppler shift and recoil-isomer tagging techniques. An unusually low value is observed for the ratio B(E2;21/2+→17/2+)/B(E2;17/2+→13/2+) in 169Os, similar to the “anomalously” low values of the ratio B(E2;41+→21+)/B(E2;21+→0gs+) previously observed in several transitional rare-earth nuclides with even numbers of neutrons and protons, including the neighbouring 168,170Os. Furthermore, the evolution of B(E2;21/2+→17/2+)/B(E2;17/2+→13/2+) with increasing neutron number in the odd-mass isotopic chain 169,171,173Os is observed to follow the same trend as observed previously in the even-even Os isotopes. These findings indicate that the possible quantum phase transition from a seniority conserving structure to a collective regime as a function of neutron number suggested for the even-even systems is maintained in these odd-mass osmium nuclei, with the odd valence neutron merely acting as a “spectator”. As for the even-even nuclei, the phenomenon is highly unexpected for nuclei that are not situated near closed shells.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2021-09-01 |