Search for long lived heaviest nuclei beyond the valley of stability
P. Roy Chowdhury, C. Samanta, D.N. Basu

TL;DR
This paper investigates the potential existence of long-lived superheavy nuclei beyond the valley of stability by calculating decay half-lives and analyzing stability islands around Z=114, 120, 126 and N=184 using various nuclear models.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive theoretical study of decay modes and half-lives of superheavy nuclei, exploring the stability island hypothesis with multiple nuclear models and comparing with experimental data.
Findings
Predicted long-lived SHN near Z=106-108 with N~160-164.
Identified nuclei with potential for long half-lives, including beta-stable and alpha-emitting isotopes.
Discrepancies discussed between calculated and experimental decay half-lives.
Abstract
The existence of long lived superheavy nuclei (SHN) is controlled mainly by spontaneous fission and -decay processes. According to microscopic nuclear theory, spherical shell effects at Z=114, 120, 126 and N=184 provide the extra stability to such SHN to have long enough lifetime to be observed. To investigate whether the so-called "stability island" could really exist around the above Z, N values, the -decay half lives along with the spontaneous fission and -decay half lives of such nuclei are studied. The -decay half lives of SHN with Z=102-120 are calculated in a quantum tunneling model with DDM3Y effective nuclear interaction using values from three different mass formulae prescribed by Koura, Uno, Tachibana, Yamada (KUTY), Myers, Swiatecki (MS) and Muntian, Hofmann, Patyk, Sobiczewski (MMM). Calculation of spontaneous fission (SF) half…
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