Mass measurement of 56Sc reveals a small A=56 odd-even mass staggering, implying a cooler accreted neutron star crust
Z. Meisel, S. George, S. Ahn, D. Bazin, B.A. Brown, J. Browne, J.F., Carpino, H. Chung, A.L. Cole, R.H. Cyburt, A. Estrad\'e, M. Famiano, A. Gade,, C. Langer, M. Mato\v{s}, W. Mittig, F. Montes, D.J. Morrissey, J. Pereira, H., Schatz, J. Schatz, M. Scott, D. Shapira, K. Smith

TL;DR
This study measures the mass of 56Sc, revealing a small odd-even mass staggering that challenges some models and impacts understanding of neutron star crust cooling and heating processes.
Contribution
First-time measurement of 56Sc mass, showing deviations from global models and refining neutron star crust heating and cooling predictions.
Findings
56Sc mass indicates small odd-even staggering.
Results favor density functional calculations over the FRDM model.
Urca cooling in neutron star crusts is weaker than previously thought.
Abstract
We present the mass excesses of 52-57Sc, obtained from recent time-of-flight nuclear mass measurements at the National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory at Michigan State University. The masses of 56Sc and 57Sc were determined for the first time with atomic mass excesses of -24.85(59)(+0 -54) MeV and -21.0(1.3) MeV, respectively, where the asymmetric uncertainty for 56Sc was included due to possible contamination from a long-lived isomer. The 56Sc mass indicates a small odd-even mass staggering in the A = 56 mass-chain towards the neutron drip line, significantly deviating from trends predicted by the global FRDM mass model and favoring trends predicted by the UNEDF0 and UNEDF1 density functional calculations. Together with new shell-model calculations of the electron-capture strength function of 56Sc, our results strongly reduce uncertainties in model calculations of the heating and…
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