Measurement and microscopic description of odd-even staggering of charge radii of exotic copper isotopes
R. P. de Groote, J. Billowes, C. L. Binnersley, M. L. Bissell, T. E., Cocolios, T. Day Goodacre, G. J. Farooq-Smith, D. V. Fedorov, K. T. Flanagan,, S. Franchoo, R. F. Garcia Ruiz, W. Gins, J.D. Holt, \'A. Koszor\'us, K. M., Lynch, T. Miyagi, W. Nazarewicz, G. Neyens

TL;DR
This study measures charge radii of exotic copper isotopes, revealing unexpected odd-even staggering behavior near the N=50 shell gap, and compares results with advanced nuclear models to understand underlying nuclear structure effects.
Contribution
First measurements of charge radii for short-lived copper isotopes up to N=50 using CRIS at ISOLDE-CERN, providing new insights into nuclear structure and OES phenomena.
Findings
Observed reduction in OES near N=50 shell gap
Charge radii variations linked to many-body polarization effects
VS-IMSRG calculations reproduce local charge radii variations
Abstract
The mesoscopic nature of the atomic nucleus gives rise to a wide array of macroscopic and microscopic phenomena. The size of the nucleus is a window into this duality: while the charge radii globally scale as , their evolution across isotopic chains reveals unanticipated structural phenomena [1-3]. The most ubiquitous of these is perhaps the Odd-Even Staggering (OES) [4]: isotopes with an odd number of neutrons are usually smaller in size than the trend of their even-neutron neighbours suggests. This OES effect varies with the number of protons and neutrons and poses a significant challenge for nuclear theory [5-7]. Here, we examine this problem with new measurements of the charge radii of short-lived copper isotopes up to the very exotic Cu , produced at only 20 ions/s, using the highly-sensitive Collinear Resonance Ionisation Spectroscopy (CRIS) method at…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNuclear Physics and Applications · Astro and Planetary Science · Nuclear physics research studies
