Emergence of low-energy monopole strength in the neutron-rich calcium isotopes
J. Piekarewicz

TL;DR
This study investigates the development of low-energy monopole strength in neutron-rich calcium isotopes using a relativistic RPA approach, revealing its correlation with weakly-bound neutron orbitals and symmetry energy properties.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the emergence of low-energy monopole strength in calcium isotopes, highlighting the role of weakly-bound states and continuum transitions with a non-spectral method.
Findings
No low-energy monopole strength in stable isotopes.
Emergence of low-energy strength beyond 48Ca due to weakly-bound orbitals.
Inverse correlation between neutron-skin thickness and inverse energy weighted sum.
Abstract
The isoscalar monopole response of neutron-rich nuclei is sensitive to both the incompressibility coefficient of symmetric nuclear matter and the density dependence of the symmetry energy. The main goal of this paper is to explore the emergence, evolution, and origin of low energy monopole strength along the even-even calcium isotopes: from 40Ca to 60Ca. The distribution of isoscalar monopole strength is computed in a relativistic random phase approximation (RPA) using three effective interactions that have been calibrated to the properties of finite nuclei and neutron stars. A non-spectral approach is adopted that allows for an exact treatment of the continuum without any reliance on discretization. For the stable calcium isotopes, no evidence of low-energy monopole strength is observed, even as the 1f7/2 neutron orbital is being filled and the neutron-skin thickness progressively…
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