Structure of Exotic Nuclei: A Theoretical Review
Shan-Gui Zhou

TL;DR
This paper reviews the theoretical understanding of exotic nuclei, highlighting their unique features, recent discoveries, and the physics behind phenomena like halos, shell evolution, and clustering, which are crucial for nuclear physics and nucleosynthesis.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of recent theoretical progress in understanding the structure and phenomena of exotic nuclei, emphasizing new physics and experimental insights.
Findings
Identification of characteristic features of exotic nuclei
Recent progress in understanding halo and shell evolution phenomena
Insights into clustering effects and new radioactivities
Abstract
The study of exotic nuclei---nuclei with the ratio of neutron number to proton number deviating much from that of those found in nature---is at the forefront of nuclear physics research because it can not only reveal novel nuclear properties and thus enrich our knowledge of atomic nuclei, but also help us to understand the origin of chemical elements in the nucleosynthesis. With the development of radioactive ion beam facilities around the world, more and more unstable nuclei become experimentally accessible. Many exotic nuclear phenomena have been observed or predicted in nuclei far from the -stability line, such as neutron or proton halos, the shell evolution and changes of nuclear magic numbers, the island of inversion, soft-dipole excitations, clustering effects, new radioactivities, giant neutron halos, the shape decoupling between core and valence nucleons in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNuclear physics research studies
