6533b861fe1ef96bd12c4c98

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Shell-Structure and Pairing Interaction in Superheavy Nuclei: Rotational Properties of theZ=104NucleusRf256

Sami Rinta-antilaMatti LeinoO. DorvauxR. LozevaK. HauschildF. DecheryPaivi NieminenA. Lopez-martensUlrika JakobssonAndrej HerzanJuha SorriJ. PiotB. SulignanoF. P. HeßbergerPhilippos PapadakisMikael SandzeliusPaul GreenleesB. J. P. GallM. AsaiC. ScholeyDaniel CoxM. VenhartJanne PakarinenPauli PeuraT. L. KhooJan SarénCh. TheisenT. GrahnD. SeweryniakSteffen KetelhutS. JuutinenR-d HerzbergPekka RuotsalainenR. JulinJuha UusitaloE. ParrPeter M. JonesP. RahkilaJ. LjungvallL.-l. AnderssonZouhair AsfariG. HenningJ. Rubert

subject

Physics010308 nuclear & particles physicsNuclear TheoryShell (structure)General Physics and AstronomyMoment of inertia01 natural sciencesmedicine.anatomical_structureAtomic orbitalPairing0103 physical sciencesmedicineAtomic physicsNuclear Experiment010306 general physicsSpin (physics)Electronic band structureNucleusEnergy (signal processing)

description

The rotational band structure of the $Z=104$ nucleus $^{256}\mathrm{Rf}$ has been observed up to a tentative spin of $20\ensuremath{\hbar}$ using state-of-the-art $\ensuremath{\gamma}$-ray spectroscopic techniques. This represents the first such measurement in a superheavy nucleus whose stability is entirely derived from the shell-correction energy. The observed rotational properties are compared to those of neighboring nuclei and it is shown that the kinematic and dynamic moments of inertia are sensitive to the underlying single-particle shell structure and the specific location of high-$j$ orbitals. The moments of inertia therefore provide a sensitive test of shell structure and pairing in superheavy nuclei which is essential to ensure the validity of contemporary nuclear models in this mass region. The data obtained show that there is no deformed shell gap at $Z=104$, which is predicted in a number of current self-consistent mean-field models.

https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevlett.109.012501