6533b82efe1ef96bd12928cc

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Charge radii of exotic potassium isotopes challenge nuclear theory and the magic character of N = 32

Gustav R. JansenC. M. RickettsPaul-gerhard ReinhardS. J. NovarioS. J. NovarioShane WilkinsFredrik GustafssonÁ. KoszorúsÁ. KoszorúsC. L. BinnersleyMark BissellWitold NazarewiczMarkus KortelainenMarkus KortelainenA. R. VernonA. R. VernonW. G. JiangW. G. JiangW. G. JiangB. S. CooperGerda NeyensGerda NeyensS. W. BaiGaute HagenAndreas EkströmA. KanellakopoulosChristian ForssénR. P. De GrooteR. P. De GrooteB. K. SahooThomas PapenbrockThomas PapenbrockKieran FlanaganThomas Elias CocoliosJ. BillowesR. F. Garcia RuizR. F. Garcia RuizXiaofei YangXiaofei YangS. Franchoo

subject

kaliumNuclear Theory[PHYS.NUCL]Physics [physics]/Nuclear Theory [nucl-th]nucl-thAtomic Physics (physics.atom-ph)Nuclear TheoryOther Fields of PhysicsFOS: Physical sciencesGeneral Physics and Astronomy[PHYS.NEXP]Physics [physics]/Nuclear Experiment [nucl-ex]nucl-ex114 Physical sciencesphysics.atom-ph01 natural sciencesEffective nuclear chargePhysics - Atomic PhysicsNuclear Theory (nucl-th)Nuclear physicsCharge radius0103 physical sciencesNuclear Physics - ExperimentNeutronNuclear Experiment (nucl-ex)Nuclear Experiment010306 general physicsNuclear ExperimentPhysicsisotoopit010308 nuclear & particles physicsCharge (physics)Nuclear matter[PHYS.PHYS.PHYS-GEN-PH]Physics [physics]/Physics [physics]/General Physics [physics.gen-ph]Coupled clusterIsotopes of potassiumNuclear Physics - TheoryydinfysiikkaNuclear density

description

Nuclear charge radii are sensitive probes of different aspects of the nucleon-nucleon interaction and the bulk properties of nuclear matter; thus, they provide a stringent test and challenge for nuclear theory. The calcium region has been of particular interest, as experimental evidence has suggested a new magic number at $N = 32$ [1-3], while the unexpectedly large increases in the charge radii [4,5] open new questions about the evolution of nuclear size in neutron-rich systems. By combining the collinear resonance ionization spectroscopy method with $\beta$-decay detection, we were able to extend the charge radii measurement of potassium ($Z =19$) isotopes up to the exotic $^{52}$K ($t_{1/2}$ = 110 ms), produced in minute quantities. Our work provides the first charge radii measurement beyond $N = 32$ in the region, revealing no signature of the magic character at this neutron number. The results are interpreted with two state-of-the-art nuclear theories. For the first time, a long sequence of isotopes could be calculated with coupled-cluster calculations based on newly developed nuclear interactions. The strong increase in the charge radii beyond $N = 28$ is not well captured by these calculations, but is well reproduced by Fayans nuclear density functional theory, which, however, overestimates the odd-even staggering effect. These findings highlight our limited understanding on the nuclear size of neutron-rich systems, and expose pressing problems that are present in some of the best current models of nuclear theory.

https://doi.org/10.1038/s41567-020-01136-5