6533b85dfe1ef96bd12bea92

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Bridging the nuclear structure gap between stable and super heavy nuclei

A. Lopez-martensSteffen KetelhutE. A. MccutchanJohn P. GreeneT. LauritsenPhilippos PapadakisS. GrosS. K. TandelR. V. F. JanssensI. StefanescuP. ChowdhuryB. B. BackS. EeckhaudtM. CarpenterTakashi NakatsukasaG. D. JonesAlexander RobinsonD. SeweryniakR-d HerzbergD. PetersonS. ZhuU. S. TandelD. RostronAndreas Martin HeinzXuejun WangI. AhmadPaul GreenleesD. G. JenkinsC. J. ListerM. AsaiK. HauschildJ. QianF. G. KondevP. MarleyT. L. KhooC. N. Davids

subject

PhysicsNuclear and High Energy Physics010308 nuclear & particles physicsFermi levelNuclear TheoryNuclear structureFermi surface[PHYS.NEXP]Physics [physics]/Nuclear Experiment [nucl-ex]01 natural sciences7. Clean energyIsland of stabilityNuclear physicssymbols.namesakeAtomic orbitalExcited state0103 physical sciencessymbolsWoods–Saxon potential010306 general physicsNuclear Experiment

description

International audience; Due to recent advances in detection techniques, excited states in several trans-fermium nuclei were studied in many laboratories worldwide, shedding light on the evolution of nuclear structure between stable nuclei and the predicted island of stability centered around spherical magic numbers. In particular, studies of K-isomers around the Z=100 and N=152 deformed shell closures extended information on the energies of Nilsson orbitals at the Fermi surface. Some of these orbitals originate from spherical states, which are relevant to the magic gaps in super-heavy nuclei. The single-particle energies can be used to test various theoretical predictions and aid in extrapolations towards heavier systems. So far, the Woods-Saxon potential reproduces the data best, while self-consistent approaches miss some of the observed features, indicating a need to modify the underlying effective nucleon-nucleon interactions.

10.1016/j.nuclphysa.2010.01.039http://hal.in2p3.fr/in2p3-00599568