Collectivity in the light radon nuclei measured directly via Coulomb excitation
L. P. Gaffney, A. P. Robinson, D. G. Jenkins, A. N. Andreyev, M., Bender, A. Blazhev, N. Bree, B. Bruyneel, P. A. Butler, T. E. Cocolios, T., Davinson, A. N. Deacon, H. De Witte, D. DiJulio, J. Diriken, A. Ekstr\"om,, Ch. Fransen, S. J. Freeman, K. Geibel, T. Grahn, B. Hadinia

TL;DR
This study measures electromagnetic matrix elements in light radon nuclei using Coulomb excitation, providing insights into their collectivity and shape coexistence, and comparing results with theoretical models.
Contribution
First direct measurement of electromagnetic matrix elements in $^{202}$Rn and $^{204}$Rn via Coulomb excitation, advancing understanding of shape coexistence in heavy nuclei.
Findings
Weak nuclear deformation inferred from low-lying level schemes.
Measured $B(E2)$ values indicate limited collectivity.
Results agree with beyond-mean-field model calculations.
Abstract
Background: Shape coexistence in heavy nuclei poses a strong challenge to state-of-the-art nuclear models, where several competing shape minima are found close to the ground state. A classic region for investigating this phenomenon is in the region around and the neutron mid-shell at . Purpose: Evidence for shape coexistence has been inferred from -decay measurements, laser spectroscopy and in-beam measurements. While the latter allow the pattern of excited states and rotational band structures to be mapped out, a detailed understanding of shape coexistence can only come from measurements of electromagnetic matrix elements. Method: Secondary, radioactive ion beams of Rn and Rn were studied by means of low-energy Coulomb excitation at the REX-ISOLDE facility in CERN. Results: The electric-quadrupole () matrix element connecting the ground…
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